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Issue 21
9th
November 2009
C&I Magazine
Rocket science in the making
Richard Butler,
09/11/2009
Confirmation of the synthesis of the elusive
pentazole molecule, of interest for its
possible role in future rocket propellants,
has come almost a decade after it was
made, writes Richard Butler
Azole molecules are enormously important
throughout organic and biological chemistry and
materials science. Pyrrole is the parent molecule
of this series of aromatic planar pentagonal fivemembered
rings with nitrogen and carbon atoms.
However, the highest member – a planar pentagon
of five N-atoms (HN5), pentazole – has long been
sought experimentally and has proved an attractive
target for many theoretical chemists.1
Many questions arise about this enigmatic
molecule. Can it exist? Is it the final member of
the azole series with no carbon? Or should it be
classified in the realm of inorganic chemistry?
Notwithstanding this intrinsic interest, high
nitrogen molecules – with three or more linked
nitrogen atoms – also have potential as high
energy sources and they attract particular interest
for practical uses as fuels or fuel additives. The
higher oxides dinitrogen trioxide N2O3, dinitrogen
tetroxide N2O4 and dinitrogen pentoxide N2O5, are
fairly unstable and explosive, a consequence of
the chemical stability of their constituent nitrogen
bonds and the high oxidation state of the nitrogen.
N2O4 is one of the most important oxidisers of
rocket fuels, used to oxidise hydrazine (N2H4) in
the Titan rocket and in the recent NASA Messenger
probe to Mercury.
As a probable source of pentazole anion, N5-,
the synthesis of HN5 was of huge importance as
researchers speculated that if the anion were to
be combined with its cation N5
+, the result would
be a stable nitrogen fuel that could deliver a
substantially better propulsion power than the
same quantity of hydrazine.
Quest for the ring
The possibility of the molecule HN5 has long been
considered by organic chemists and in 1915
the first speculative – but incorrect – claim of a
derivative of such a ring, R-N5, where R = CH2-
(C=NH)-NHNH2, was made. In the mid-1950s, by
the combined work of Rolf Huisgen and Ivar Ugi
in Munich and Klaus Clusius and Hans Hürzeler in
Zurich, the existence of the ring was proved.2
It was established as an intermediate in the
reactions of aryl diazonium salts, Ar-N2
+.X–, with
azide ion (N3
-), at 0oC, by 15N isotopic labeling
experiments. A number of aryl derivatives were
subsequently isolated and a low temperature
X-ray crystal structure of one was obtained.3
These aryl pentazole derivatives are unstable and
evolve N2 gas, changing to aryl azides even at low
temperatures in the range 0 to –10oC. Since this
early work there has been considerable interest
in HN5 and a number of attempts were made to
remove the aryl group from Ar-N5, the first by Ugi
in 1961.4
However, searches for HN5 became more
vigorous after the discovery of N5
+, an acyclic
chain of five N-atoms as a cation in inorganic salts,
was announced by Karl Christe et al in 1999.5 The
possibility of obtaining a material that combines
N5
+ with the then unknown anion N5
– became
a realistic target. By 2002, two groups6,7 had
independently detected N5
– in the gas phase by
bombarding aryl pentazole molecules with high
energy particles in high energy mass spectrometric
degradation experiments.
My own group’s interest in pentazole chemistry,
at the National University of Ireland in Galway, was
sparked much earlier, in the mid-1990s, following
a request from the late Charles Rees, Hoffmann
professor of organic chemistry at Imperial College
London, UK, for us to contribute a chapter on
pentazole chemistry for a book on Comprehensive
Heterocyclic Chemistry II.3 During work for this
chapter we identified significant challenges in the
field which we subsequently went on to address, but
none was more demanding than HN5. In subsequent
years Rees took a keen interest in the work that
developed from this chapter and we often discussed
it during our friendship.
In 1996 my research group reported a variable
temperature proton NMR kinetic study of the
mechanism of degradation of aryl pentazoles to
N2(g) and aryl azides. In 1998 we reported the
mechanism of the formation of the aryl pentazoles
as intermediates in the normal reactions of aryl
diazonium salts with azide anion by using proton
and 15N NMR to directly monitor the reaction at –80
to –85oC. The aryl pentazoles arose from cyclisations
in fleeting aryl pentazene intermediates, acyclic
chains of five N-atoms, Ar-N=N-N3 (Scheme 1). Also
the protonation sites and very low basicities of aryl
pentazoles were established from low temperature
15N NMR work.
This work8 gave us considerable experience of the
low temperature techniques and the experimental
difficulties involved in working with these
unstable and sensitive high nitrogen compounds.
Unsuccessful direct attempts to remove the aryl
group from aryl pentazoles led us eventually to seek
a general N-dearylation reaction for lower azoles
and we focused on cerium(IV) ammonium nitrate,
Ce(NH4)2(NO3)6 (CAN). We found that this reagent
could remove a p-anisyl group, p-MeO-C6H4
–, from
the N atom of an azole molecule. This work effectively
rendered the p-anisyl group as a useful azole NH
protecting group since the p-anisyl substituent can
be readily restored as well as removed.8
Under the appropriate conditions, the p-anisyl
group comes off as a p-benzoquinone molecule
(2) (Scheme 2) and the remaining azole compound
could be readily isolated. We tested this reaction
on a wide range of different N-(p-anisyl)-azoles,
at temperatures down to –40oC and developed
an understanding of the scope and limitations of
the process. With proof of principle established
together with my PhD students Mark Hanniffy
and John Stephens, we applied this reaction to
N-p-anisylpentazole at –40oC by 2001 with results
similar to the other azoles, particularly pyrazoles and
tetrazoles, and later 1,2,3-triazoles.
These results gave a strong indication that HN5
had been generated in the solutions at –40oC, and
this was indeed the case. It survived for a short
time, probably about a minute,9 before degrading to
nitrogen gas and azide anion, N3
–. Strategic synthetic
placement of initially one – and later two and three –
15N isotopic labeling atoms in the starting pentazole
(1) showed that the labeled isotopic N atoms had
been scrambled in the symmetrical tautomeric HN5
and N5
– species in the solutions and the labels
appeared at all positions in the azide anion fragment
(3).
The positions of the labeled 15N atoms were
followed through the reactions by low temperature
15N NMR spectra. When more than one 15N isotope
atom was present, the splitting patterns between
the adjacent 15N atoms in the NMR spectra of the
fragments confirmed that the observed signals were
indeed from the azide fragments of HN5/N5
–.
Proof of synthesis
This paper on our synthesis of HN5 appeared in
2003. But despite our own convictions, there were
some chemists who questioned whether what we
had actually produced was in fact NO3
–. Earlier this
year, the controversy has finally been laid to rest
with the publication of a paper by Rod Bartlett and
coworkers at the University of Florida, US,10 after
comparisons of our experimental splitting constants,
J values, were compared with predicted values. These
were the first calculated splitting constants between
two bonded 15N atoms and were determined by the
Bartlett-Perera group using coupled-cluster theory.
The agreement between the experimental and
theoretical values was excellent.
There is no doubt that if a new allotrope of
nitrogen, N5
+.N5
– – overall N10 – can be obtained
it will be a remarkable substance. The species N5
+.
N5
– contains both an oxidiser and a reducer and the
transfer of one electron should trigger the release of
its energy to give five molecules of nitrogen gas with
no pollution other than production of air, minus the
oxygen. For its use as a rocket propellant taming it
would probably be a challenge, but stabilisers for
other propellants are well established. The technical
challenge of producing significant quantities of N5
–
would undoubtedly prove difficult and daunting.
On this 40th anniversary of the first Moon landing,
however, even the possibility of a new powerful nonpolluting
rocket propellant based on a new form of
the element nitrogen alone seems particularly apt.
Acknowledgement: Dedicated to the memory of
Charles W. Rees FRS.
Richard Butler is emeritus professor at the school of
chemistry, National University of Ireland, Galway.
References
- Bartlett, R.J., Chem. Ind., 2000, 4, 140.
- Huisgen, R. and Ugi, I., Angew.Chem., 1956, 68, 705;
Clusius, K. and Hürzeler, H., Helv.Chim.Acta, 1954, 37,
798.
- Butler, R. N. in Comprehensive Heterocyclic Chemistry
II, 1996, Eds. Katritzky, A. R., Rees, C. W. and Scriven,
E. F., Elsevier Science, New York, vol. 4, (Ed., Storr, R.
C.), 897-904.
- Ugi, I., Angew.Chem., 1961, 73, 172.
- Christe, K. O. et al, Angew.Chem.Int.Ed., 1999, 38,
897.
- Ostmark, H. et al, Chem.Phys.Lett., 2003, 379, 539.
- Vij, A et al, Angew.Chem.Int.ed., 2002, 41 , 3051.
- Butler, R. N. et al, J. Org. Chem,, 2008, 73, 1354;
Butler, R. N., Stephens, J. C. and Burke, L. A., Chem.
Comm., 2003, 1016.
- da Silva, G. and Bozzelli, J. W., J. Org. Chem., 2008, 73,
1343.
- Perera, S. A., Gregusová, A. and Bartlett, R. J. J.Phys.
Chem., 2009, 113, 3197.