Two new series of tricyclic heterocycles, namely 5,6-dihydro-4H-benzo[b][1,2,4]triazolo[1,5-d][1,4]diazepinium salts 10 and the related neutral, free bases 13 were synthesized from 4-acetoxy-1-acetyl-4-phenylazo-1,2,3,4-tetrahydroquinolines 8 and nitriles 9 in the presence of aluminium chloride by the [3+ + 2]-cycloaddition reaction of the in situ generated azocarbenium intermediates 14 followed by a ring-expansion rearrangement. In the rearrangement reaction, the phenyl substituent in the initially formed spiro-triazolium adducts 16 underwent a [1,2]-migration from C(3) to the electron-deficient N(2). This led to the ring expansion from 6-membered piperidine to 7-membered diazepine furnishing the tricyclic 1,2,4-triazole-fused 1,4-benzodiazepines.
The bicyclic 1-aza-2-azoniaallenium salt intermediates, generated from the azoester species upon treatment with a Lewis acid, have been demonstrated to participate in Huisgen-type cycloaddition with nitriles to result in the formation of fused 6,7,8,9-tetrahydro-5 H-[1,2,4]triazolo[1,5- d][1,4]diazepinium salts. This transformation is interpreted as a regular [3+2] cycloaddition between intermediates as the reactive 1,3-monopole reactants and nitriles as the nucleophilic reagents followed by spontaneous [1,2]-cationic rearrangement. The azoester precursors were easily accessible via oxidation of the corresponding hydrazones using hypervalent iodine oxidant PhI(OAc) under mild conditions. The [1,2,4]triazolodiazepine compounds represent a class of N-containing biologically important heterocycles with a new type of scaffold.
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