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Electrochemical and electron spin resonance studies of selected benzazolo[3,2‐ a ]quinolinium salts
Author(s) -
Cox Osvaldo,
Dumas José A.,
Rivera Luis A.,
García Carmelo,
Alegria Antonio E.
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
journal of heterocyclic chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.321
H-Index - 59
eISSN - 1943-5193
pISSN - 0022-152X
DOI - 10.1002/jhet.5570360420
Subject(s) - chemistry , perchlorate , saturated calomel electrode , electron paramagnetic resonance , nitro , dimethylformamide , electrochemistry , cyclic voltammetry , ion , resonance (particle physics) , chloride , inorganic chemistry , medicinal chemistry , alkyl , organic chemistry , reference electrode , electrode , nuclear magnetic resonance , physics , particle physics , solvent
The electrochemical reduction of the chloride or perchlorate salts of benzazolo[3,2‐ a ]quinolinium ion and several of its analogues is reported. The compounds studied are the perchlorate salt of 3‐nitrobenzothiazolo‐and 3‐nitro‐9‐methoxybenzothiazolo[3,2‐ a ]quinolinium, and the chloride salts of 7‐ethyl‐, 3‐nitro‐7‐methyl‐, 3‐nitro‐7‐ethyl‐, 3‐nitro‐7‐isopropyl‐, 3‐nitro‐7‐butyl‐ and 3‐nitro‐7‐benzylbenzimidazolo[3,2‐ a ]‐quinolinium, respectively. Cyclic voltammetry of the corresponding 3‐nitrobenzothiazolo[3,2‐ a ]quinolinium derivatives in N,N ‐dimethylformamide shows an irreversible peak potential at ‐0.6 and a quasi‐reversible peak at ‐(1.2–1.3) volts, respectively, relative to the standard calomel electrode. In contrast, the corresponding 3‐nitrobenzimidazolo[3,2‐ a ]quinolinium derivatives show, in general, reversible peaks at near ‐0.8 and ‐(1.2–1.4) volts, respectively. Upon electrolytic reduction, only the nitro‐substituted derivatives produced observable electron paramagnetic resonance electron spin resonance spectra. This observation is explained in terms of the stabilization of the radicals produced by the nitro group. Theoretical MM+/AM1/UHF calculations support the idea that the larger nitrogen splitting is caused by N‐12 and the minor splittings by N‐7 in the benzimidazolo[3,2‐ a ]quinolinium ion series.