Bear in mind I am a year removed from learning ochem material:
In my ochem lab II, we are synthesizing 4-bromo-2-nitroaniline and the third synthetic step involves:
4-bromo-acetanilide ----HNO3/H2SO4---> 4-bromo-2-nitroacetanilide
The H2SO4 is added to the 4-bromoacetanidilde thereby protonating the amide substituent, rendering it electron deficient, and therefore deactivating and meta-directing. Therefore, since the -Br group is weakly activating, then the nitration SHOULD occur @ #3C, due to both ortho-directing of the -BR and meta-directing of the deactivating protonated amide form. but the lab protocol says that nitration occurs @ #2C.
What is wrong with my logic? does protonation of the amide substituent NOT occur since amides are NOT BASIC, and the lone pair of that nitrogen is actually involved in the resonance stabilization of the amide? therefore the amide is the stronger activator than the weakly deactivating halogens? and therefore the amide directs ortho, so nitration occurs at #2 carbon?
Thank you