Abstract

Bromine formation in the mixture of solid NaBr and KNO3 was observed and the process was studied in different acidified organic solvent–water mixtures by monitoring the bromination of acetanilide and other compounds, containing activated aromatic substituents. This assay is based on fast bromination reaction of these aromatic compounds, as differently from the assay of Br2, the brominated aromatics can be easily determined by conventional gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC–MS) methods. It was found that bromine was generated autocatalytically on the surface of salt crystals and the reaction was characterized by a lag period, the duration of which depended on reaction conditions, and importantly on the type of the organic solvent in the reaction mixture. As the bromine formation could be easily controlled by reaction conditions, it was suggested that the studied reaction might have practical applications as an environmentally friendly and economically feasible bromination method. It was also shown that the bromination of aromatics followed the mechanism of classical electrophilic aromatic substitution reaction.

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