906 CHAPTER 21 More About Amines • Heterocyclic Compounds
Substituted pyridines undergo many of the side-chain reactions that substituted
benzenes undergo, such as bromination and oxidation.
When 2- or 4-aminopyridine is diazotized, or is formed.
Apparently, the diazonium salt reacts immediately with water to form a hydroxypyri-
dine (Section 16.10). The product of the reaction is a pyridone because the keto form
of a hydroxypyridine is more stable than the enol form. (The mechanism for the con-
version of a primary amino group into a diazonium group is shown in Section 16.12).
The electron-withdrawing nitrogen causes the of alkyl groups at-
tached to the 2- and 4-positions of the pyridine ring to have about the same acidity as
the of ketones (Section 19.1).
Consequently, the of alkyl substituents can be removed by base, and the
resulting carbanions can react as nucleophiles.
+ H 2 O
+ Br−
N
−
CH 3
N
CH 3
N
CH CH
N
CH 2
CH
O
HO−
CH 3 N
CH 3
N CH 2 CH 3
CH 3
CH− 2
−NH 2 CH 3 Br
an SN2 reaction
an aldol condensation
a-hydrogens
N
−
CH 3
N
CH 2
HO−
N
CH 2
−
−
−
−
N
CH 2
N
CH 2
N
CH 2
a-hydrogens
a-hydrogens
a-pyridone g-pyridone
NBS
∆/peroxide
N CHCH 3
Br
N
Na 2 Cr 2 O 7
H 2 SO 4
∆
CH 2 CH 3
N
CH 3
N
COOH
O
N
NH 2
N
N NH 2 N N N Cl− N OH
+
NaNO 2 , HCl
0 °C
NaNO 2 , HCl
0 °C
N
N
N Cl− OH
+
4-hydroxypyridine
enol form
N
H
-pyridone
keto form
N
H
-pyridone
keto form
2-hydroxypyridine
enol form
O
H 2 O
H 2 O
2-aminopyridine
4-aminopyridine