I've been following a procedure for the production of azoaryl compound. The starting material is a naphthylamine derivative that is converted to the corresponding diazonium salt and then reacted with a tertiary phenylamine for the final azoaryl product-- a deep red compound.
Recently, I switched to a new vendor for the starting material. Apparently, as the final step in the product of the napthylamine derivative they recrystallized it using either HCl or sulfuric acid, so the final product is the either the hydrochloric salt of the amine or the sulfate salt. At any rate, when I follow this procedure, the product of my diazotation is different than the intended product. It gives me an entirely different peak by HPLC and somewhat different (although similar) chemical shifts by proton NMR.
When I take this product on to the next step, I again get an entirely different product -- a bright orange solid. Again the HPLC peak is has a different retention time than the intended azoaryl. Proton NMR is also different, but all my protons are accounted for.
If I slurry the naphthylamine in NaOH solution to convert it back to the free amine, it performs as intended.
Any ideas what might be going on over here? How is the naphthylamine salt affecting the diazotization (if that's indeed what's going on)? Ideas? References?
Much thanks!