Selectivity can be a challenge. Often alternative products act as contaminants or are simply wasted. Considerable attention thus is paid to optimization of the reaction conditions. For example, the mixed acid can be derived from phosphoric or
perchloric acids in place of sulfuric acid. Electron-withdrawing groups such as other
nitro are
deactivating. Nitration is accelerated by the presence of
activating groups such as
amino,
hydroxy and
methyl groups also
amides and
ethers resulting in para and ortho isomers. In addition to regioselectivity, the degree of nitration is of interest.
Fluorenone, for example, can be selectively trinitrated or tetranitrated. The direct nitration of
aniline with
nitric acid and
sulfuric acid, according to one source, results in a 50/50 mixture of
para- and
meta-nitroaniline isomers. In this reaction the fast-reacting and activating aniline (ArNH2) exists in equilibrium with the more abundant but less reactive (deactivated) anilinium ion (ArNH3+), which may explain this reaction product distribution. According to another source, a more controlled nitration of aniline starts with the formation of
acetanilide by reaction with
acetic anhydride followed by the actual nitration. Because the amide is a regular activating group the products formed are the para and ortho isomers. Heating the reaction mixture is sufficient to hydrolyze the amide back to the nitrated aniline.
Alternatives to nitric acid Mixture of nitric and acetic acids or nitric acid and acetic anhydride is commercially important in the production of
RDX, as amines are destructed by sulfuric acid.
Acetyl nitrate had also been used as a nitration agent. In the
Wolffenstein–Böters reaction,
benzene reacts with nitric acid and
mercury(II) nitrate to give
picric acid. In the second half of the 20th century, new reagents were developed for laboratory usage, mainly N-nitro heterocyclic compounds.
Ipso nitration With aryl chlorides,
triflates and nonaflates,
ipso nitration may also take place. The phrase
ipso nitration was first used by Perrin and Skinner in 1971, in an investigation into chloroanisole nitration. In one protocol, 4-chloro-
n-butylbenzene is reacted with
sodium nitrite in
t-butanol in the presence of 0.5 mol%
Pd2(dba)3, a biarylphosphine ligand and a
phase-transfer catalyst to provide 4-nitro-
n-butylbenzene. == See also ==