Amines
Amines
Amines
Nomenclature —
R = alkyl or aryl
Substitution on nitrogen
H3C CH CH CH3
is indicated by an
uppercase N. NHCH3
2-(N-methylamino)-3-phenylbutane
1
Aromatic amines are often named as derivatives of aniline,
Ph-NH2.
H2N(CH2)4NH2, putrescine,
2
O
OCPh O
COCH3 COOH
H N
N
N
cocaine lysergic acid CH3
CH3
Stereochemistry of N in Amines —
In the case of
quarternary ammonium R1 R1
salts enantiomers can be N X X N
resolved — R2 R R4 R2
R3 4 R3
Preparation of Amines —
Reduction of Nitro Group —
Sn, HCl + - B:
ArNO 2 ArNH 3 Cl ArNH 2 + BH + + Cl -
4
Ammonolysis of Halides —
This reaction works best for 1o alkyl halides and may work
for 2o halides, but for 3o halides —
CH3 CH3
H3C C X + NH3 H2C C + NH4 X
CH3 CH3
Vinyl and aryl halides do not usually react. Aryl halides will
react if strong electron withdrawing groups (activating for
nucleophilic aromatic substitution) are located ortho or
para to the halogen —
NO2 NO2
+ NH3 + NH4 F
NO2 NO2
F NH2
5
or if a strong nucleophile is used (via an elimination-
addition involving benzyne) —
Cl NH2
NaNH 2
RX + NH3 RNH3 X
RNH2 + RX R2NH2 X
RX NH3
R2NH R 3N
NH3
R3N RX R4N X
6
The Gabriel Synthesis —
for preparation of pure 1o amines.
O O
KOH RX
N H N K
Ka = 5x10-9
O O
O O
H2O, OH O
N R RNH2 +
heat O
1o amine
O O
A. Reductive Amination.
R' H R' H
H2, Ni or Pt
R C O + N R1 R C N R1
or NaBH3CN
aldehyde (R'=H) R2 R2
or ketone ammonia, 1o, 2o or 3o amine
1o, or 2o amine
Rs may be Ars
eg
H H
Ph C O NH3 H2 Ph C NH2
+
Pt
benzaldehyde H benzylamine
7
In forming 1o and 2o amines, the reaction probably
proceeds through an imine:
H2, Pt
R2C NH
or NaBH3CN H H
B. Reduction of Amides —
O
1) LiAlH 4
R C N R' R CH2 N R'
R" 2) H2O R"
C. Reduction of Nitriles —
8
Reactions of Amines —
Basicity of Amines —
RNH2 + H3 O RNH3 + H2 O
stronger base weaker base
RNH3 OH
Kb =
RNH2
9
Therefore, one might expect the following order of basicity
in amines:
11
As noted above, the reason for amide basicity at the
oxygen can also be explained by resonance —
O O
R C NH2 R C NH2
O H O H O H
R C NH2 R C NH2 R C NH2
aniline
NH3 NH3
no other reasonable
anilinium ion canonical structures
12
Compound pKb
methylamine 3.46
aniline 9.38
diphenylamine 13.2
Ag2O
RR'3N X RR'3N OH + AgX ppt.
H2O
very basic
eg H
heat
(CH3)3N CH2 C CH3 H2C CH CH3 +
H (CH3)3N + H2O
OH
13
Nitration of Aromatic Amines —
HNO3
+ + tar (oxidation)
H2SO4
NO2
NO2
60-70% 30-40%
+
H
14
Sulfonation of Aromatic Amines —
weaker
NH3 acid NH2 stronger
a zwitterion base
S N
15
Reactions of Amines with Nitrous Acid —
R N N Cl R + N2 + Cl
16
Secondary aliphatic or aromatic amines give
N-nitrosamines —
17
Aromatic Diazonium Salts —
m-ethoxybenzenediazonium
bromide
Preparation —
0o C
Ar NH2 + NaNO 2 + 2 HCl
1o aromatic
amine Ar N N Cl + 2 H 2O + NaCl
a diazonium salt
18
Excess HCl (more than 2 equivalents) is employed to keep
the reaction mixture acidic to avoid coupling of the newly
formed diazonium ion with the reactive aromatic ring —
Excess NaNO2 is used because HONO is unstable and
-H
NH2 + N N
H2N N N
19
Reactions of Aromatic Diazonium Salts —
Replacement of N2 —
Ar-N2+ + :Z ------> Ar-Z + N2
20
5) Replacement of -N2+ by -H —
Overall:
Ar-H HNO3
H2SO4
Ar-NO2
Sn
HCl
Ar-NH2
HONO
Ar-N2
H3PO2
Ar-H !
However, the -NO2 and -NH2 groups can be used for
directing purposes, eg prepare m-bromotoluene —
Br Br Br Br
N2+ Cl- NH2 NH C CH3
O
21
Coupling — The Synthesis of Azo Compounds —
Effect of pH on coupling —
NaOH
Low pH High pH
HCl Substitution
usually
NaOH occurs para
Ar N N Cl Ar N N OH
HCl
couples does not couple to the
activating
group.
HNR2 NR2
Coupling
with
NaOH phenols is
HCl
usually
does not couple couples carried out
in mildly
alkaline
OH O
solution,
NaOH
with amines
HCl in mildly
acidic
couples slowly couples rapidly solution.
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