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Pyrrole

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Pyrrole
Explicit structural formula of pyrrole, with aromaticity indicated by dashed bonds
Explicit structural formula of pyrrole, with aromaticity indicated by dashed bonds
Numbered skeletal formula of pyrrole
Numbered skeletal formula of pyrrole
Ball-and-stick model of the pyrrole molecule
Ball-and-stick model of the pyrrole molecule
Space-filling model of the pyrrole molecule
Space-filling model of the pyrrole molecule
Names
Preferred IUPAC name
1H-Pyrrole[2]
Other names
  • Azole
  • Imidole[1]
Identifiers
3D model (JSmol)
1159
ChEBI
ChEMBL
ChemSpider
ECHA InfoCard 100.003.387 Edit this at Wikidata
EC Number
  • 203-724-7
1705
RTECS number
  • UX9275000
UNII
UN number 1992, 1993
  • InChI=1S/C4H5N/c1-2-4-5-3-1/h1-5H checkY
    Key: KAESVJOAVNADME-UHFFFAOYSA-N checkY
  • InChI=1/C4H5N/c1-2-4-5-3-1/h1-5H
  • N1C=CC=C1
  • [nH]1cccc1
Properties
C4H5N
Molar mass 67.091 g·mol−1
Density 0.967 g cm−3
Melting point −23 °C (−9 °F; 250 K)
Boiling point 129 to 131 °C (264 to 268 °F; 402 to 404 K)
Vapor pressure 7 mmHg at 23 °C
Acidity (pKa) 17.5 (for the N−H proton)
Basicity (pKb) 13.6 (pKa 0.4 for C.A.)
−47.6×10−6 cm3 mol−1
Viscosity 0.001225 Pa s
Thermochemistry
1.903 J K−1 mol−1
108.2 kJ mol−1 (gas)
2242 kJ mol−1
Hazards
NFPA 704 (fire diamond)
NFPA 704 four-colored diamondHealth 2: Intense or continued but not chronic exposure could cause temporary incapacitation or possible residual injury. E.g. chloroformFlammability 2: Must be moderately heated or exposed to relatively high ambient temperature before ignition can occur. Flash point between 38 and 93 °C (100 and 200 °F). E.g. diesel fuelInstability 0: Normally stable, even under fire exposure conditions, and is not reactive with water. E.g. liquid nitrogenSpecial hazards (white): no code
2
2
0
Flash point 33.33 °C (91.99 °F; 306.48 K)
550 °C (1,022 °F; 823 K)
Explosive limits 3.1–14.8%
Safety data sheet (SDS) Chemical Safety Data
Related compounds
Related compounds
Phosphole, arsole, bismole, stibole
Except where otherwise noted, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C [77 °F], 100 kPa).
checkY verify (what is checkY☒N ?)

Pyrrole is a heterocyclic, aromatic, organic compound, a five-membered ring with the formula C4H4NH.[3] It is a colorless volatile liquid that darkens readily upon exposure to air. Substituted derivatives are also called pyrroles, e.g., N-methylpyrrole, C4H4NCH3. Porphobilinogen, a trisubstituted pyrrole, is the biosynthetic precursor to many natural products such as heme.[4]

Pyrroles are components of more complex macrocycles, including the porphyrinogens and products derived therefrom, including porphyrins of heme, the chlorins, bacteriochlorins, and chlorophylls.[5]

Properties, structure, bonding

[edit]

Pyrrole is a colorless volatile liquid that darkens readily upon exposure to air, and is usually purified by distillation immediately before use.[6] Pyrrole has a nutty odor. Pyrrole is a 5-membered aromatic heterocycle, like furan and thiophene. Unlike furan and thiophene, it has a dipole in which the positive end lies on the side of the heteroatom, with a dipole moment of 1.58 D. In CDCl3, it has chemical shifts at 6.68 (H2, H5) and 6.22 (H3, H4). Pyrrole is an extremely weak base for an amine, with a conjugate acid pKa of −3.8. The most thermodynamically stable pyrrolium cation (C4H6N+) is formed by protonation at the 2 position. Substitution of pyrrole with alkyl substituents provides a more basic molecule—for example, tetramethylpyrrole has a conjugate acid pKa of +3.7. Pyrrole is also weakly acidic at the N–H position, with a pKa of 16.5. As a hydrogen bonding Lewis acid it is classified as a hard acid and the ECW model lists its acid parameters as EA = 1.38 and CA = 0.68.

Pyrrole has aromatic character because the lone pairs of electrons on the nitrogen atom is partially delocalized into the ring, creating a 4n + 2 aromatic system (see Hückel's rule). In terms of its aromaticity, pyrrole's is modest relative to benzene but comparable to related heterocycles thiophene and furan. The resonance energies of benzene, pyrrole, thiophene, and furan are, respectively, 152, 88, 121, and 67 kJ/mol (36, 21, 29, and 16 kcal/mol).[7] The molecule is flat.

History

[edit]

Pyrrole was first detected by F. F. Runge in 1834, as a constituent of coal tar.[8] In 1857, it was isolated from the pyrolysate of bone. Its name comes from the Greek pyrrhos (πυρρός, "reddish, fiery"), from the reaction used to detect it—the red color that it imparts to wood when moistened with hydrochloric acid.[9]

Occurrence in nature

[edit]
Structure of Heme B

Pyrrole itself is not naturally occurring, but many of its derivatives are found in a variety of cofactors and natural products. Common naturally produced molecules containing pyrroles include vitamin B12, bile pigments like bilirubin and biliverdin, and the porphyrins of heme, chlorophyll, chlorins, bacteriochlorins, and porphyrinogens.[5] Other pyrrole-containing secondary metabolites include PQQ, makaluvamine M, ryanodine, rhazinilam, lamellarin, prodigiosin, myrmicarin, and sceptrin. The syntheses of pyrrole-containing haemin, synthesized by Hans Fischer was recognized by the Nobel Prize.

Pyrrole is a constituent of tobacco smoke and may contribute to its toxic effects.[10]

Synthesis

[edit]

Pyrrole is prepared industrially by treatment of furan with ammonia in the presence of solid acid catalysts, like SiO2 and Al2O3.[9]

Synthesis of pyrrole from furan
Synthesis of pyrrole from furan

Pyrrole can also be formed by catalytic dehydrogenation of pyrrolidine.[citation needed]

Several syntheses of the pyrrole ring have been described.[11] Three routes dominate,[12] but many other methods exist.

Hantzsch pyrrole synthesis

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The Hantzsch pyrrole synthesis is the reaction of β-ketoesters (1) with ammonia (or primary amines) and α-haloketones (2) to give substituted pyrroles (3).[13][14]

The Hantzsch pyrrole synthesis
The Hantzsch pyrrole synthesis

Knorr pyrrole synthesis

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The Knorr pyrrole synthesis involves the reaction of an α-amino ketone or an α-amino-β-ketoester with an activated methylene compound.[15][16][17] The method involves the reaction of an α-aminoketone (1) and a compound containing a methylene group α to (bonded to the next carbon to) a carbonyl group (2).[18]

The Knorr pyrrole synthesis
The Knorr pyrrole synthesis

Paal–Knorr pyrrole synthesis

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In the Paal–Knorr pyrrole synthesis, a 1,4-dicarbonyl compound reacts with ammonia or a primary amine to form a substituted pyrrole.[19][20]

The Paal–Knorr pyrrole synthesis
The Paal–Knorr pyrrole synthesis

Other methods

[edit]

Van Leusen reaction pyrroles are produced by reaction of tosylmethyl isocyanide (TosMIC) with an enone in the presence of base, in a Michael addition. A 5-endo cyclization then forms the 5-membered ring, which reacts to eliminate the tosyl group. The last step is tautomerization to the pyrrole.[citation needed]

Mechanism of the Van Leusen reaction to form pyrroles
Mechanism of the Van Leusen reaction to form pyrroles

By the Barton–Zard synthesis, an isocyanoacetate reacts with a nitroalkene in a 1,4-addition, followed by 5-endo-dig cyclization, elimination of the nitro group, and tautomerization.[21]

The starting materials in the Piloty–Robinson pyrrole synthesis, named for Gertrude and Robert Robinson and Oskar Piloty, are two equivalents of an aldehyde and hydrazine.[22][23] The product is a pyrrole with substituents at the 3 and 4 positions. The aldehyde reacts with the diamine to an intermediate di-imine (R−C=N−N=C−R). In the second step, a [3,3]-sigmatropic rearrangement takes place between. Addition of hydrochloric acid leads to ring closure and loss of ammonia to form the pyrrole. The mechanism was developed by the Robinsons.

In one modification, propionaldehyde is treated first with hydrazine and then with benzoyl chloride at high temperatures and assisted by microwave irradiation:[24]

Piloty–Robinson reaction[24]
Piloty–Robinson reaction[24]

Pyrroles bearing multiple substituents have been obtained from the reaction of münchnones and alkynes. The reaction mechanism involves 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition followed by loss of carbon dioxide by a retro-Diels–Alder process. Similar reactions can be performed using azalactones.

Synthesis of pyrroles via Diels–Alder cyclization
Synthesis of pyrroles via Diels–Alder cyclization

Pyrroles can also be prepared by silver-catalyzed cyclization of alkynes with isonitriles, where R2 is an electron-withdrawing group, and R1 is an alkane, aryl group, or ester. Examples of disubstituted alkynes have also been seen to form the desired pyrrole in considerable yield. The reaction is proposed to proceed via a silver acetylide intermediate. This method is analogous to the azide–alkyne click chemistry used to form azoles.

Synthesis of pyrrole via silver click chemistry
Synthesis of pyrrole via silver click chemistry

One synthetic route to pyrrole involves the decarboxylation of ammonium mucate, the ammonium salt of mucic acid. The salt is typically heated in a distillation setup with glycerol as a solvent.[25]

Synthesis of pyrrole from ammonium mucate
Synthesis of pyrrole from ammonium mucate

Biosynthesis

[edit]

The biosynthesis of pyrrole rings begins with aminolevulinic acid (ALA), which is synthesized from glycine and succinyl-CoA. ALA dehydratase catalyzes the condensation of two ALA molecules via a Knorr-type ring synthesis to form porphobilinogen (PBG). This later reacts to form, for example, the macrocycles heme and chlorophyll.[26]

Mechanism of biosynthesis of porphobilinogen
Mechanism of biosynthesis of porphobilinogen

.

Proline is biosynthetically derived from the amino acid L-glutamate. Glutamate-5-semialdehyde is first formed by glutamate 5-kinase (ATP-dependent) and glutamate-5-semialdehyde dehydrogenase (which requires NADH or NADPH). This can then either spontaneously cyclize to form 1-pyrroline-5-carboxylic acid, which is reduced to proline by pyrroline-5-carboxylate reductase (using NADH or NADPH), or turned into ornithine by ornithine aminotransferase, followed by cyclisation by ornithine cyclodeaminase to form proline.[27]

Zwitterionic structure of both proline enantiomers: (S)-proline (left) and (R)-proline

Proline can be used as precursor of aromatic pyrroles in secondary natural products, as in prodigiosins.

Figure 1: Structure of Prodigiosin 1 highlighting the A, B, and C pyrrole rings

The biosynthesis of Prodigiosin[28][29] involves the convergent coupling of three pyrrole type rings (labeled A, B, and C in figure 1) from L-proline, L-serine, L-methionine, pyruvate, and 2-octenal.

Ring A is synthesized from L-proline through the nonribosomal peptide synthase (NRPS) pathway (figure 2), wherein the pyrrolidine ring of proline is oxidized twice through FAD+ to yield pyrrole ring A.

Figure 2: biosynthesis of pyrrole ring A

Ring A is then expanded via the polyketide synthase pathway to incorporate L-serine into ring B (figure 3). Ring A fragment is transferred from the peptidyl carrier protein (PCP) to the Acyl Carrier Protein (ACP) by a KS domain, followed by transfer to malonyl-ACP via decarboxylative Claisen condensation. This fragment is then able to react with the masked carbanion formed from the PLP mediated decarboxylation of L-serine, which cyclizes in a dehydration reaction to yield the second pyrrole ring. This intermediate is then modified by methylation (which incorporates a methyl group from L-methionine onto the alcohol at the 6 position) and oxidation of the primary alcohol to the aldehyde to yield the core A–B ring structures.

Biosynthesis of pyrrole ring B

Reactions and reactivity

[edit]

Due to its aromatic character, pyrrole is difficult to hydrogenate, does not easily react as a diene in Diels–Alder reactions, and does not undergo usual olefin reactions. Its reactivity is similar to that of benzene and aniline, in that it is easy to alkylate and acylate. Under acidic conditions, pyrroles oxidize easily to polypyrrole,[30] and thus many electrophilic reagents that are used in benzene chemistry are not applicable to pyrroles. In contrast, substituted pyrroles (including protected pyrroles) have been used in a broad range of transformations.[11]

Reaction of pyrrole with electrophiles

[edit]

Pyrroles generally react with electrophiles at the α position (C2 or C5), due to the highest degree of stability of the protonated intermediate.

Pyrrole electrophilic substitution
Pyrrole electrophilic substitution

Pyrroles react easily with nitrating (e.g. HNO3/Ac2O), sulfonating (Py·SO3), and halogenating (e.g. NCS, NBS, Br2, SO2Cl2, and KI/H2O2) agents.[31] Halogenation generally provides polyhalogenated pyrroles, but monohalogenation can be performed. As is typical for electrophilic additions to pyrroles, halogenation generally occurs at the 2-position, but can also occur at the 3-position by silation of the nitrogen. This is a useful method for further functionalization of the generally less reactive 3-position.[citation needed]

Acylation

[edit]

Acylation generally occurs at the 2-position, through the use of various methods. Acylation with acid anhydrides and acid chlorides can occur with or without a catalyst.[32] 2-Acylpyrroles are also obtained from reaction with nitriles, by the Houben–Hoesch reaction. Pyrrole aldehydes can be formed by a Vilsmeier–Haack reaction.[33]

Vilsmeier–Haack formylation of pyrrole
Vilsmeier–Haack formylation of pyrrole

Reaction of deprotonated pyrrole

[edit]

The NH proton in pyrroles is moderately acidic with a pKa of 17.5.[34] Pyrrole can be deprotonated with strong bases such as butyllithium and sodium hydride.[35] The resulting alkali pyrrolide is nucleophilic. Treating this conjugate base with an electrophile such as iodomethane gives N-methylpyrrole.

N-Metalated pyrrole can react with electrophiles at the N or C positions, depending on the coordinating metal. More ionic nitrogen–metal bonds (such as with lithium, sodium, and potassium) and more solvating solvents lead to N-alkylation. Nitrophilic metals, such as MgX, lead to alkylation at C (mainly C2), due to a higher degree of coordination to the nitrogen atom. In the cases of N-substituted pyrroles, metalation of the carbons is more facile. Alkyl groups can be introduced as electrophiles, or by cross-coupling reactions.[citation needed]

Pyrrole C-metalation
Pyrrole C-metalation

Substitution at C3 can be achieved through the use of N-substituted 3-bromopyrrole, which can be synthesized by bromination of N-silylpyrrole with NBS.[citation needed]

Reductions

[edit]

Pyrroles can undergo reductions to pyrrolidines and to pyrrolines.[36] For example, Birch reduction of pyrrole esters and amides produced pyrrolines, with the regioselectivity depending on the position of the electron-withdrawing group.[citation needed]

Cyclization reactions

[edit]

Pyrroles with N-substitution can undergo cycloaddition reactions such as [4+2]-, [2+2]-, and [2+1]-cyclizations. Diels-Alder cyclizations can occur with the pyrrole acting as a diene, especially in the presence of an electron-withdrawing group on the nitrogen. Vinylpyrroles can also act as dienes.[citation needed]

Pyrrole DA
Pyrrole DA

Pyrroles can react with carbenes, such as dichlorocarbene, in a [2+1]-cycloaddition. With dichlorocarbene, a dichlorocyclopropane intermediate is formed, which breaks down to form 3-chloropyridine (the Ciamician–Dennstedt rearrangement).[37][38][39]

Ciamician–Dennstedt rearrangement
Ciamician–Dennstedt rearrangement

Commercial uses

[edit]

Polypyrrole is of some commercial value. N-Methylpyrrole is a precursor to N-methylpyrrolecarboxylic acid, a building-block in pharmaceutical chemistry.[9] Pyrroles are also found in several drugs, including atorvastatin, ketorolac, and sunitinib. Pyrroles are used as lightfast red, scarlet, and carmine pigments.[40][41]

Analogs and derivatives

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Structural analogs of pyrrole include:

  • Pyrroline, a partially saturated analog with one double bond
  • Pyrrolidine, the saturated hydrogenated analog

Derivatives of pyrrole include indole, a derivative with a fused benzene ring.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
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  3. ^ Loudon, Marc G. (2002). "Chemistry of Naphthalene and the Aromatic Heterocycles". Organic Chemistry (4th ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 1135–1136. ISBN 978-0-19-511999-2.
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  34. ^ Bird, C. W.; Cheeseman, G. W. H. (1984). Comprehensive Heterocyclic Chemistry. Pergamon. pp. 39–88. ISBN 978-0-08-096519-2, although note that Balón, M.; Carmona, M. C.; Muñoz, M. A.; Hidalgo, J. (1989). "The acid-base properties of pyrrole and its benzologs indole and carbazole: a re-examination from the excess acidity method". Tetrahedron. 45 (23). Great Britain: Pergamon: 7501–7504. doi:10.1016/S0040-4020(01)89212-7 suggests that figure's revision to 17.3.
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  37. ^ Ciamician, G. L.; Dennstedt, M. (1881). "Ueber die Einwirkung des Chloroforms auf die Kaliumverbindung Pyrrols" [On the reaction of chloroform with the potassium compound of pyrrole]. Berichte der Deutschen Chemischen Gesellschaft. 14: 1153–1162. doi:10.1002/cber.188101401240.
  38. ^ Corwin, Alsoph Henry (1950). Elderfield, Robert Cooley (ed.). Heterocyclic Compounds. Vol. 1. New York, NY: Wiley. p. 309.
  39. ^ Mosher, H. S. (1950). Elderfield, Robert Cooley (ed.). Heterocyclic Compounds. Vol. 1. New York, NY: Wiley. p. 475.
  40. ^ "DPP Pigments,Diketopyrrolopyrrole Pigments,DPP Pigments Wholesaler,Diketopyrrolopyrrole Pigments Suppliers". dyes-pigments.standardcon.com.
  41. ^ Kaur, Matinder; Choi, Dong Hoon (2015). "Diketopyrrolopyrrole: brilliant red pigment dye-based fluorescent probes and their applications". Chemical Society Reviews. 44 (1): 58–77. doi:10.1039/C4CS00248B. PMID 25186723.

Further reading

[edit]
  • Jones, R. Jones, ed. (1990). Pyrroles. Part I. The Synthesis and the Physical and Chemical Aspects of the Pyrrole Ring. The Chemistry of Heterocyclic Compounds. Vol. 48. Chichester: John Wiley & Sons. p. 351. doi:10.1002/recl.19911100712. ISBN 978-0-471-62753-1. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)
  • Jolicoeur, Benoit; Chapman, Erin E.; Thompson, Alison; Lubell, William D. (2006). "Pyrrole protection". Tetrahedron. 62 (50): 11531–11563. doi:10.1016/j.tet.2006.08.071.
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