Azo printing exploits this reaction as well. In this case, the diazonium ion is degraded by light, leaving a latent image in undegraded diazonium salt which is made to react with a phenol, producing a colored image: the blueprint.[3]
Prontosil, the first sulfa drug, was once produced by azo coupling. The azo compound is a prodrug that is activated in-vivo to produce the sufanilamide.
The reaction is also used in the Pauly reaction test to detect tyrosine or histidine residues in proteins.
Additionally, through the azo coupling reaction between the aromatic diazonium ion and aromatic amino acid residues, this reaction can also be used to form or to modify proteins such as tRNA synthetase.[4]
Besides activated aromatic coupling agents, other nucleophilic carbons also couple with diazonium salts as illustrated by the synthesis of azo pigments.
In alkaline media, diazonium salt can react with most primary and secondary amines, which exist as a free base to produce triazene.[9] This chemical reaction is called azo N-coupling,[10] or the synthesis of azoamines.[11]
↑K. Hunger. W. Herbst "Pigments, Organic" in Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry, Wiley-VCH, Weinheim, 2012. Script error: No such module "doi".