CHAPTER XII
NITRO DERIVATIVES OF HALOGENOBENZENES
APART from a few exceptions nitro derivatives of halogenobenzenes are not
used as explosives. Nevertheless they are, or may be, important intermediates in
the manufacture of explosives, dyes and drugs.
Derivatives of chlorobenzene are of course the most important, as they are the
most readily available. For certain syntheses nitro derivatives of fluoro- or bromo-
benzene are used. They may be of value sometimes, since the former are less reactive
and the latter more reactive than chlorobenzene derivatives. For example, recently
2,4-dinitrofluorobenzene has been widely applied in the elucidation of the structure
of peptides (Sanger [1]).
Ingold and Bird [2] investigated the rates of nitration of fluoro-, chloro-, bromo-
and iodo-benzenes with acetyl nitrate and found that they could be arranged in the
following order: 1: 0.15: 0.033: 0.030: ca. 0.18 (taking the relative rate of nitration
of fluorobenzene as unity).
The kind of halogen atom affects the substitution in the ring with the nitro
group. Table 100 shows the results of investigations by Sandin and J. R. W. Wil-
liams [3]. J. D. Roberts and co-workers [3a] obtained similar results by using
isotope dilution analysis.
TABLE 100
Halogenonitro compound
Compound
ortho para ortho/para ratio
C 6 H 5 F 12.6 87.4 0.14
C 6 H 5 Cl 30.1 73.1 0.41
C 6 H 5 Br 37.2 62.5 0.59
C 6 H 5 I 34.2 65.8 0.52
This trend has been explained in a satisfactory manner by the rule established
by Lapworth and Robinson [4]: the increase in relative yield of the ortho-product
parallels the decrease in the negative inductive influence of the halogens. The induc-