To a solution of
55 g. (0.36 mole) of 2-amino-5-nitrotoluene (m.p.
129–132°) in
2.5 l. of glacial acetic acid in a
5-l. round-bottomed flask, provided with an
efficient mechanical stirrer, is added all at once (Note
1) a solution of
25 g. (0.36 mole) of sodium nitrite in 60 ml. of water. During this addition the temperature is not allowed to rise above 25° (Note
2). After the nitrite solution has been added, stirring is continued for 15 minutes to complete the diazotization. Any yellow precipitate formed during the next few hours is filtered and discarded (Note
3).
The solution is allowed to stand for 3 days at room temperature, and is then concentrated on the
steam bath under reduced pressure (
water pump) until spattering makes further evaporation impossible. Two hundred milliliters of water is added to the residue, and the contents of the flask are washed into a
small beaker where they are stirred to a smooth slurry. The product is filtered, washed thoroughly on the funnel with cold water, and dried in an
oven at 80–90°. The crude material melts at
204–206° and weighs
47–57 g. (
80–96%). It is purified by recrystallization from
650 ml. of boiling methanol using 5 g. of decolorizing charcoal. The recrystallized, pale yellow needles of
5-nitroindazole melt at
208–209°. The yield is
42–47 g. (
72–80%) (Note
4). Further recrystallization does not raise the melting point.