The nitrous acid-catalysed nitration of phenol

Abstract
The reaction of phenol with nitrous acid (10–4 M < [NIII] < 10–2 M) and nitric acid (10–3 M < [NV] < 0.3M) in aqueous sulphuric acid (19–45% H2SO4) at 25 °C gives rise to p-nitrophenol by a nitrosation–oxidation pathway, and concurrently to a 57 : 43 mixture of o- and p-nitrophenol by catalysed nitration. The latter reaction is the major one, and is first-order in phenol with a first-order rate coefficient given by [NIII][NV]/(x[NIII]+y[NV]). The x and y are constants for a given concentration of sulphuric acid. The dependence of x and y upon acidity, and comparison of the reactivity of phenol with that of hexadeuteriophenol and anisole, leads to a proposed mechanism for catalysed nitration. In this there is pre-equilibrium formation, from phenol and NIII, of a intermediate with the formula PhONO. This gives rise to a phenoxyl radical and nitric oxide, a step which is rate limiting when the rate is fully enhanced by [NV]. Nitric oxide is reversibly oxidised by NV to give NO2 and NIII. Reaction is completed by combination of the phenoxyl radical and NO2, in a step which is rate limiting when the rate is fully enhanced by [NIII].

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