Synthetic uses of aryl diazonium salts MCQs With Answer

Introduction: The synthetic uses of aryl diazonium salts are central to pharmaceutical organic chemistry, enabling versatile transformations such as azo coupling, Sandmeyer halogenation, Balz–Schiemann fluorination, and replacement by nucleophiles. For B. Pharm students, understanding diazotization, reactivity patterns, electronic effects, and mechanism concepts is essential for designing aromatic substitutions and preparing intermediates for drug synthesis. These reagents offer strategic routes to install halogens, cyano groups, phenols, and azo linkages under mild conditions, impacting dye chemistry and active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) modification. This concise, keyword-rich guide focuses on core synthetic applications, reaction outcomes, and limitations of aryl diazonium salts. Now let’s test your knowledge with 50 MCQs on this topic.

Q1. What is the usual reagent combination to form an aryl diazonium salt from an aniline?

  • Sodium nitrite and hydrochloric acid
  • Potassium permanganate and sulfuric acid
  • Sodium borohydride and ethanol
  • Hydrogen peroxide and acetic acid

Correct Answer: Sodium nitrite and hydrochloric acid

Q2. The Sandmeyer reaction is mainly used to replace a diazonium group with which type of substituent?

  • Alkyl groups
  • Halogens or pseudohalogens
  • Alcohol groups
  • Amide groups

Correct Answer: Halogens or pseudohalogens

Q3. Which product is typically obtained from the Balz–Schiemann reaction of an aryl diazonium tetrafluoroborate?

  • Aryl fluoride
  • Aryl chloride
  • Aryl alcohol
  • Aryl amine

Correct Answer: Aryl fluoride

Q4. In diazo coupling reactions, the aryl diazonium ion acts primarily as what?

  • Nucleophile attacking an electron-poor aromatic
  • Electrophile reacting with activated aromatic rings
  • Radical initiator for polymerization
  • Reducing agent for nitrile groups

Correct Answer: Electrophile reacting with activated aromatic rings

Q5. Which of the following is a common limitation when using aryl diazonium salts?

  • Excessive thermal stability
  • Potential instability and explosive decomposition when dry
  • Inability to form C–N bonds
  • Lack of reactivity toward nucleophiles

Correct Answer: Potential instability and explosive decomposition when dry

Q6. The Sandmeyer reaction typically involves copper salts. Which role does the copper play?

  • Strong base to deprotonate the diazonium
  • Oxidant to form nitroso compounds
  • Facilitator of nucleophilic substitution via single-electron transfer
  • Solvent for the diazonium salt

Correct Answer: Facilitator of nucleophilic substitution via single-electron transfer

Q7. Which substituent on an aniline accelerates diazotization and stabilizes the diazonium salt?

  • Strong electron-donating group (e.g., -OMe)
  • Strong electron-withdrawing group (e.g., -NO2)
  • Alkyl group (e.g., -CH3)
  • Halogen (e.g., -Cl)

Correct Answer: Strong electron-donating group (e.g., -OMe)

Q8. Diazonium salts are most stable under which conditions?

  • Hot, concentrated acidic solution
  • Cold, dilute acidic solution
  • Dry powdered form at ambient temperature
  • Basic aqueous solution

Correct Answer: Cold, dilute acidic solution

Q9. Which transformation converts an aryl diazonium salt to a phenol?

  • Sandmeyer reaction with CuCN
  • Hydrolysis (replacement by OH)
  • Balz–Schiemann reaction
  • Nitrosation

Correct Answer: Hydrolysis (replacement by OH)

Q10. Which reaction uses diazonium salts to produce azo dyes?

  • Diels–Alder reaction
  • Azo coupling with activated aromatic compounds
  • Friedel–Crafts acylation
  • Buchwald–Hartwig amination

Correct Answer: Azo coupling with activated aromatic compounds

Q11. What gas is released when an aryl diazonium salt decomposes during substitution reactions?

  • Oxygen
  • Nitrogen
  • Chlorine
  • Carbon dioxide

Correct Answer: Nitrogen

Q12. Which reagent is commonly used to convert an aryl diazonium salt into an aryl nitrile?

  • CuCl
  • CuCN
  • NaBH4
  • H2O2

Correct Answer: CuCN

Q13. The Gattermann reaction (or Gattermann–Koch variant) involving diazonium chemistry is best associated with which outcome?

  • Formation of aryl fluorides
  • Formylation of activated aromatic rings via diazonium intermediates
  • Reduction of azo compounds to hydrazo compounds
  • Direct alkylation of anilines

Correct Answer: Formylation of activated aromatic rings via diazonium intermediates

Q14. Which statement about the electronic effect of a diazonium group on the aromatic ring is correct?

  • Diazonium is strongly electron-donating and activates the ring
  • Diazonium is an electron-withdrawing group and deactivates the ring
  • Diazonium directs electrophiles to ortho only
  • Diazonium group has no electronic effect

Correct Answer: Diazonium is an electron-withdrawing group and deactivates the ring

Q15. In azo coupling, which position on the coupling component is most reactive toward the diazonium electrophile?

  • Meta position of a nitrobenzene
  • Para or ortho position of an activated aromatic (e.g., phenol, aniline)
  • The ipso position of a deactivated ring
  • Benzylic carbon

Correct Answer: Para or ortho position of an activated aromatic (e.g., phenol, aniline)

Q16. Which of the following is a common use of aryl diazonium salts in medicinal chemistry?

  • Direct alkyl chain elongation
  • Introduction of functional groups like halogens or CN for further elaboration
  • Peptide bond formation
  • Carbohydrate glycosylation

Correct Answer: Introduction of functional groups like halogens or CN for further elaboration

Q17. Which mechanism is typically invoked for Sandmeyer-type replacements of diazonium groups?

  • Electrophilic aromatic substitution
  • Nucleophilic aromatic substitution via addition–elimination
  • Single-electron transfer (radical) pathway
  • Diels–Alder cycloaddition

Correct Answer: Single-electron transfer (radical) pathway

Q18. Which reagent combination is often used for the formation of the diazonium salt from a primary aromatic amine in water?

  • NaNO2 and HCl at low temperature
  • KMnO4 and H2SO4 at high temperature
  • n-BuLi and ether at low temperature
  • BH3 and THF at room temperature

Correct Answer: NaNO2 and HCl at low temperature

Q19. Which of the following products arises from the reduction of an aryl diazonium salt with hypophosphorous acid (H3PO2)?

  • Aryl hydrogen (deamination to give the parent arene)
  • Aryl fluoride
  • Azo compound
  • Phenol

Correct Answer: Aryl hydrogen (deamination to give the parent arene)

Q20. The Meerwein arylation involves diazonium salts to generate which species for C–C bond formation?

  • Aryl cations attacking alkenes
  • Aryl radicals adding to electron-deficient alkenes
  • Nitrenium ions inserting into C–H bonds
  • Carbenes reacting with aryl halides

Correct Answer: Aryl radicals adding to electron-deficient alkenes

Q21. Which halogen is most commonly introduced via the direct Sandmeyer protocol using CuX?

  • Fluorine
  • Chlorine or bromine
  • Iodine via Balz–Schiemann
  • Astato via Sandmeyer routinely

Correct Answer: Chlorine or bromine

Q22. Which statement best describes diazonium salts’ role in preparing aryl boronates for Suzuki coupling?

  • Diazonium salts directly form boronates without catalysts
  • Diazonium salts can be transformed into aryl radicals that undergo borylation with suitable reagents
  • Diazonium salts are not compatible with borylation chemistry
  • Diazonium salts convert to boronates by simple hydrolysis

Correct Answer: Diazonium salts can be transformed into aryl radicals that undergo borylation with suitable reagents

Q23. Which factor most strongly affects the position of azo coupling on the coupling component?

  • Solubility of the diazonium salt
  • Electron density and activating substituents on the coupling component
  • Molecular weight of the diazonium counterion
  • Presence of heavy metals in solution

Correct Answer: Electron density and activating substituents on the coupling component

Q24. The Sandmeyer reaction can introduce a cyanide to produce aryl nitriles. What synthetic advantage do aryl nitriles provide?

  • They are inert and rarely transformed further
  • They serve as versatile synthetic handles for conversion to amides, acids, or amines
  • They block further aromatic substitution permanently
  • They are identical in reactivity to halides

Correct Answer: They serve as versatile synthetic handles for conversion to amides, acids, or amines

Q25. In the formation of diazonium salts, what is the formal oxidation state change at nitrogen from aniline to the diazonium group?

  • Decrease in oxidation state of nitrogen
  • No change in oxidation state
  • Increase in oxidation state of nitrogen
  • Change depends on solvent

Correct Answer: Increase in oxidation state of nitrogen

Q26. Which counterion is commonly used to isolate stable diazonium salts for Balz–Schiemann fluorination?

  • Sulfate (SO4(2-))
  • Tetrafluoroborate (BF4(-))
  • Chloride (Cl(-))
  • Nitrate (NO3(-))

Correct Answer: Tetrafluoroborate (BF4(-))

Q27. Which functional group on the aromatic ring makes diazotization difficult because it deactivates the ring severely?

  • Para-methoxy group
  • Meta-nitro group
  • Ortho-alkyl group
  • Para-hydroxy group

Correct Answer: Meta-nitro group

Q28. Which reaction sequence is commonly used to convert an aniline to an aryl fluoride?

  • Direct fluorination by F2 gas
  • Diazotization, formation of diazonium tetrafluoroborate, thermal decomposition (Balz–Schiemann)
  • Sandmeyer with CuF2 at room temperature
  • Oxidative fluorination with Selectfluor on aniline

Correct Answer: Diazotization, formation of diazonium tetrafluoroborate, thermal decomposition (Balz–Schiemann)

Q29. During azo coupling, what type of intermediate is formed when the activated aromatic ring reacts with the diazonium ion?

  • Sigma-complex (Wheland intermediate) leading to azo linkage
  • A carbene intermediate
  • An acylium ion
  • A peroxy radical

Correct Answer: Sigma-complex (Wheland intermediate) leading to azo linkage

Q30. Why are diazonium salts often prepared in situ rather than isolated?

  • They have excellent long-term shelf stability
  • Because they are sometimes unstable, hazardous, or explode when isolated dry
  • Isolation is prohibited by law
  • They react only when isolated

Correct Answer: Because they are sometimes unstable, hazardous, or explode when isolated dry

Q31. Which technique is most useful for characterizing the presence of a diazonium salt in solution indirectly?

  • NMR of the crude dry solid
  • Observation of nitrogen gas evolution upon decomposition
  • Colorimetric azo coupling test with an activated aromatic
  • X-ray crystallography of the solution

Correct Answer: Colorimetric azo coupling test with an activated aromatic

Q32. In the context of green chemistry, what is a potential drawback of classical diazotization methods?

  • They generate large amounts of benign byproducts
  • They can produce inorganic salt waste and require low temperatures
  • They never use aqueous media
  • They always use catalysts that are non-recyclable

Correct Answer: They can produce inorganic salt waste and require low temperatures

Q33. Which of the following is a common nucleophile that can replace diazonium to give a phenol under appropriate conditions?

  • Fluoride ion directly in water
  • Hydroxide ion (water/hydrolysis)
  • Methoxide in nonpolar solvent
  • Thiolate in neutral conditions

Correct Answer: Hydroxide ion (water/hydrolysis)

Q34. The reactivity of diazonium salts toward Sandmeyer halogenation is enhanced by which additive or metal?

  • Sodium sulfate
  • Copper(I) salts (e.g., CuCl, CuBr)
  • Sodium bicarbonate
  • Magnesium oxide

Correct Answer: Copper(I) salts (e.g., CuCl, CuBr)

Q35. Which transformation cannot be directly achieved from an aryl diazonium salt?

  • Formation of an aryl fluoride via Balz–Schiemann
  • Direct conversion to an aryl boronic acid without additional reagents
  • Replacement by CN to give aryl nitrile
  • Azo coupling to yield an azo compound

Correct Answer: Direct conversion to an aryl boronic acid without additional reagents

Q36. Which is a safer practice when handling diazonium chemistry in the lab for student training?

  • Drying and storing diazonium salts in an open container
  • Preparing diazonium salts in situ and using immediately under cold conditions
  • Heating dry diazonium salts to speed decomposition
  • Storing large quantities of isolated diazonium salts at room temperature

Correct Answer: Preparing diazonium salts in situ and using immediately under cold conditions

Q37. In pharmaceutical synthesis, why might one convert an aniline to a diazonium and then to a halide rather than direct halogenation?

  • To create a less reactive intermediate
  • Diazonium-mediated substitution can selectively introduce halogens at positions otherwise difficult to halogenate
  • Direct halogenation is always cheaper and cleaner
  • Diazonium routes avoid all waste

Correct Answer: Diazonium-mediated substitution can selectively introduce halogens at positions otherwise difficult to halogenate

Q38. Which property of aryl diazonium salts is exploited in dye chemistry?

  • Their ability to form stable free radicals
  • Their electrophilic coupling to activated aromatics forming intensely colored azo compounds
  • Their capacity to chelate metal ions
  • Their use as acid catalysts

Correct Answer: Their electrophilic coupling to activated aromatics forming intensely colored azo compounds

Q39. The Gomberg–Bachmann reaction uses diazonium salts for what purpose?

  • Introduction of fluorine into aromatics
  • Formation of biaryl compounds through radical arylation of arenes
  • Conversion of anilines to phenols only
  • Hydrogenation of aromatic rings

Correct Answer: Formation of biaryl compounds through radical arylation of arenes

Q40. Which of the following best describes the thermolysis of diazonium tetrafluoroborate salts in Balz–Schiemann?

  • Produces aryl fluoride with loss of N2 and BF3-derived species
  • Generates aryl chloride directly
  • Leads to azo dimerization exclusively
  • Yields aryl alcohols via hydrolysis

Correct Answer: Produces aryl fluoride with loss of N2 and BF3-derived species

Q41. Which substituent pattern on the aromatic amine favors para-coupling over ortho in azo coupling?

  • Bulky ortho substituents that sterically hinder ortho positions
  • Electron-withdrawing groups at para position
  • Meta-directing groups only
  • Complete lack of activating groups

Correct Answer: Bulky ortho substituents that sterically hinder ortho positions

Q42. Which technique reduces the risk associated with isolating diazonium salts for Balz–Schiemann reactions?

  • Preparing the tetrafluoroborate salt by incremental addition and immediate use
  • Drying salts at high temperature for storage
  • Crushing isolated salts to increase surface area
  • Using large excesses of oxidant

Correct Answer: Preparing the tetrafluoroborate salt by incremental addition and immediate use

Q43. Which molecule would be least likely to undergo azo coupling with a diazonium ion?

  • Anisole (methoxybenzene)
  • Phenol under basic conditions
  • Nitrobenzene
  • p-Toluidine (activated aniline derivative)

Correct Answer: Nitrobenzene

Q44. Which statement is true about diazonium salts bearing electron-withdrawing substituents?

  • They are always more stable than those with donating groups
  • They are less reactive toward electrophilic coupling than those with donating groups
  • They preferentially undergo azo coupling at high rates
  • They cannot be formed from anilines

Correct Answer: They are less reactive toward electrophilic coupling than those with donating groups

Q45. In pharmaceutical intermediates, why might a chemist choose a diazonium route to introduce a cyano group?

  • Because cyano groups are introduced directly by electrophilic aromatic substitution
  • Diazonium to cyanide (Sandmeyer with CuCN) offers regioselective introduction from an aniline precursor
  • Because cyanation via diazonium always gives enantiomerically pure products
  • Because diazonium salts are completely nonhazardous

Correct Answer: Diazonium to cyanide (Sandmeyer with CuCN) offers regioselective introduction from an aniline precursor

Q46. The formation of which intermediate is associated with single-electron transfer pathways in diazonium chemistry?

  • Carbocations exclusively
  • Aryl radicals
  • Nitrenes

Correct Answer: Aryl radicals

Q47. What precaution is important when performing diazotization on a scale in teaching labs?

  • Allow salts to dry completely before disposal
  • Maintain low temperature and avoid isolation of large quantities of solid diazonium salts
  • Use excess organic solvent to stabilize diazonium salts
  • Always heat the reaction to accelerate decomposition

Correct Answer: Maintain low temperature and avoid isolation of large quantities of solid diazonium salts

Q48. Which of the following is an application of diazonium chemistry in combinatorial or medicinal chemistry?

  • Rapid generation of aryl libraries by subsequent Sandmeyer/functional group interconversions from a common aniline scaffold
  • Direct preparation of complex peptides from diazonium salts
  • Photosensitized polymer curing exclusively
  • Direct stereoselective synthesis of chiral centers adjacent to aromatic rings

Correct Answer: Rapid generation of aryl libraries by subsequent Sandmeyer/functional group interconversions from a common aniline scaffold

Q49. Which reagent is commonly used to trap aryl cations or radicals derived from diazonium salts to form carbon–carbon bonds?

  • Simple water only
  • Electron-deficient alkenes or arenes (for radical addition) or palladium-catalyzed cross-coupling partners
  • Saturated alkanes without initiators
  • Inert gases like argon

Correct Answer: Electron-deficient alkenes or arenes (for radical addition) or palladium-catalyzed cross-coupling partners

Q50. Which description best summarizes why aryl diazonium salts are valuable in synthetic organic chemistry for B. Pharm students?

  • They are inert reagents with limited synthetic scope
  • They offer diverse, regioselective transformations (halogenation, cyanation, hydroxylation, azo coupling) enabling access to pharmaceutical intermediates
  • They only produce dyes and are irrelevant to drug synthesis
  • They are only used as oxidizing agents in metabolic studies

Correct Answer: They offer diverse, regioselective transformations (halogenation, cyanation, hydroxylation, azo coupling) enabling access to pharmaceutical intermediates

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