An organic azide is an organic compound that contains an azide (–) functional group. Because of the hazards associated with their use, few azides are used commercially although they exhibit interesting reactivity for researchers. Low molecular weight azides are considered especially hazardous and are avoided. In the research laboratory, azides are precursors to amines. They are also popular for their participation in the "click reaction" between an azide and an alkyne and in Staudinger ligation. These two reactions are generally quite reliable, lending themselves to combinatorial chemistry.
Phenyl azide ("diazoamidobenzol"), was prepared in 1864 by Peter Griess by the reaction of ammonia and phenyldiazonium. In the 1890s, Theodor Curtius, who had discovered hydrazoic acid (), described the rearrangement of acyl azides to isocyanates subsequently named the Curtius rearrangement. Rolf Huisgen described the eponymous 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition.
The interest in azides among organic chemists has been relatively modest due to the reported instability of these compounds. The situation has changed dramatically with the discovery by Sharpless et al. of Cu-catalysed (3+2)-cycloadditions between organic azides and terminal alkynes. The azido- and the alkyne groups are "bioorthogonal", which means they do not interact with living systems, and at the same time they undergo an impressively fast and selective coupling. This type of formal 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition became the most famous example of so-called "click chemistry" (perhaps, the only one known to a non-specialist), and the field of organic azides exploded.
Myriad methods exist, most often using preformed azide-containing reagent.
As a pseudohalide, azide generally displaces many leaving group, e.g. , , , sulfonate, and others to give the azido compound. The azide source is most often sodium azide (), although lithium azide () has been demonstrated.
Aliphatic alcohols give azides via a variant of the Mitsunobu reaction, with the use of hydrazoic acid.
This page is automatically generated and may contain information that is not correct, complete, up-to-date, or relevant to your search query. The same applies to every other page on this website. Please make sure to verify the information with EPFL's official sources.
Sodium azide is an inorganic compound with the formula . This colorless salt is the gas-forming component in some car airbag systems. It is used for the preparation of other azide compounds. It is an ionic substance, is highly soluble in water, and is very acutely poisonous. Sodium azide is an ionic solid. Two crystalline forms are known, rhombohedral and hexagonal. Both adopt layered structures. The azide anion is very similar in each form, being centrosymmetric with N–N distances of 1.18 Å.
The 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition is a chemical reaction between a 1,3-dipole and a dipolarophile to form a five-membered ring. The earliest 1,3-dipolar cycloadditions were described in the late 19th century to the early 20th century, following the discovery of 1,3-dipoles. Mechanistic investigation and synthetic application were established in the 1960s, primarily through the work of Rolf Huisgen. Hence, the reaction is sometimes referred to as the Huisgen cycloaddition (this term is often used to specifically describe the 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition between an organic azide and an alkyne to generate 1,2,3-triazole).
In chemical synthesis, click chemistry is a class of simple, atom-economy reactions commonly used for joining two molecular entities of choice. Click chemistry is not a single specific reaction, but describes a way of generating products that follow examples in nature, which also generates substances by joining small modular units. In many applications, click reactions join a biomolecule and a reporter molecule. Click chemistry is not limited to biological conditions: the concept of a "click" reaction has been used in chemoproteomic, pharmacological, biomimetic and molecular machinery applications.
Analyzes a mutant DDX3 enzyme's ATPase activity and inhibitor development, covering RNA chaperones, crystal structures, and mass spectrometry-based protein profiling.
The present invention relates to a method for preparing an at least partially acetal-protected sugar involving the step of reacting a sugar or a sugar derivative selected from the group consisting of an aldopentose, an aldohexose, an aldopentoside and an a ...
2024
The alkyne motif is a versatile functional group often encountered in organic chemistry. It can be involved in various transformations such as the alkyne-azide cycloaddition and has found widespread application in medicinal chemistry, chemical biology and ...
EPFL2024
Cancer is among the leading causes of death worldwide, and as knowledge of the disease continues to grow there is an increasing interest towards precision medicine: more specifically towards the theranostics field, i.e the development of targeted molecular ...