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Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 Chapter 20 Chapter 20 Amines Amines
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Page 1: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Created byProfessor William Tam & Dr. Phillis

Chang Ch. 20 - 1

Chapter 20Chapter 20

AminesAmines

Page 2: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 2

About The AuthorsAbout The Authors

These PowerPoint Lecture Slides were created and prepared by Professor William Tam and his wife, Dr. Phillis Chang.

Professor William Tam received his B.Sc. at the University of Hong Kong in 1990 and his Ph.D. at the University of Toronto (Canada) in 1995. He was an NSERC postdoctoral fellow at the Imperial College (UK) and at Harvard University (USA). He joined the Department of Chemistry at the University of Guelph (Ontario, Canada) in 1998 and is currently a Full Professor and Associate Chair in the department. Professor Tam has received several awards in research and teaching, and according to Essential Science Indicators, he is currently ranked as the Top 1% most cited Chemists worldwide. He has published four books and over 80 scientific papers in top international journals such as J. Am. Chem. Soc., Angew. Chem., Org. Lett., and J. Org. Chem.

Dr. Phillis Chang received her B.Sc. at New York University (USA) in 1994, her M.Sc. and Ph.D. in 1997 and 2001 at the University of Guelph (Canada). She lives in Guelph with her husband, William, and their son, Matthew.

Page 3: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 3

1. Nomenclature

NH2NH2

Butylamine Cyclohexylamine

1o Amines

Butylethylamine

N

HDiethylamine

N

H

2o Amines

Page 4: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 4

3o Amines

Triethylamine

N

Butylethylmethylamine

N

Page 5: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 5

1A.1A. ArylaminesArylamines

Aniline N,N-Dimethylaniline

NH2 N

NH2

CH3

p-Toluidine(4-Methylbenzeneamine)

Page 6: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 6

1B.1B. Heterocyclic AminesHeterocyclic Amines

Aziridine Pyrrole

NN

N

N N

HH

H

Pridine

Indole Quinoline

Page 7: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 7

2. Physical Properties and Structure of Amines

2A.2A. Physical PropertiesPhysical Properties

Page 8: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 8

2B.2B. Structure of AminesStructure of Amines

NR1

R2

R3

N: sp3 hybridized

Trigonal pyramidal

Bond angles close to 109.5o

Page 9: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 9

3o Amines with three different groups

N

R1

R2

R3

N

R1

R2

R3

● The two enantiomeric forms interconvert rapidly Impossible to resolve

enantiomers● Pyramidal or nitrogen inversion

Barrier ~ 25 kJ/mol Enough to occur rapidly at room

temperature

Page 10: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 10

Ammonium salts with four different groups

N

R1

R2

R3

N

R1

R2

R3

R4 R4

X X

enantiomerscan be resolved

Page 11: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 11

3. Basicity of Amines:Amine Salts

RNH3+ + H2O RNH2 + H3O

+

Ka =[RNH2][H3O

+]

[RNH3+]

pKa = log Ka

Page 12: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 12

The aminium ion of a more basic amine will have a larger pKa than the aminium ion of a less basic amine

H

NH H

H

H

NCH3 H

H

H

NCH3CH2 H

H

Aminiumion pKa

9.26 10.64 10.75

Page 13: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 13

NR H

H

+ H OH

H

NR H

H

OH2+> >

By releasing electrons, R— stabilizes the alkylaminium ion through dispersal of charge

>

Page 14: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 14

(CH3)3N > (CH3)2NH > CH3NH2 > NH3

3o 2o 1o

Gas phase

(CH3)2NH > CH3NH2 > (CH3)3N > NH3

2o 1o 3o

Aqueous solution

Page 15: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 15

3A.3A. Basicity of ArylaminesBasicity of Arylamines

H

NH H

Aminiumion pKa

10.64 4.58 5.08

H

NH H

H

NH H

CH3

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Ch. 20 - 16

NH2 NH2 NH2

NH2NH2

●Five resonance structures

Page 17: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 17

NH2

+ H2O

NH3

+ OH

Aniliniumion

NH3 NH3

●Only two resonance structures

Page 18: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 18

Page 19: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 19

3B.3B. Basicity of Heterocyclic AminesBasicity of Heterocyclic Amines

N

N

N NN

H HH

Order ofBasicity: >> >

pKa of theconjugate acid: 11.2 7 5.2 0.4

(c.f. Et3N, pKa of the conjugate acid = 9.7)

Page 20: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 20

N N NHH

H

H

H H

(lost of aromaticity)

+ H+

N

N

N

N

N

N

H H

H

H

HN

N

H

H

+ H+

(still aromatic)Imidazole(a very commonbase in organic

synthesis)

Page 21: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 21

3C.3C. Amines versus AmidesAmines versus Amides

O

R NH2

: :

:

O

R NH2

: :

:

:

O

R NH2

: :

:Amide

N-Protonated AmideO

R NH3

: : O

R NH3

: ::

Amides are far less basic than amines (even less basic than arylamines). The pKa of the conjugate acid of a typical amide is about zero

Larger resonance stabilizati

on

Smaller resonance stabilizati

on

Page 22: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 22

O

R NH2

:

O

R NH3

+ OH+ H2O

NH2

:

NH3 + OH+ H2OR R

<

>

Page 23: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 23

3D.3D.Aminium Salts and QuaternaryAminium Salts and QuaternaryAmmonium SaltsAmmonium Salts

R2

NR1 R3 + H Cl

R2

NR1 R3 + R4 Br

H2O

R2

NR1 R3

H(aminium salt)

Cl

R2

NR1 R3

R4

(quaternaryammonium salt)

Br

However, R4N⊕ ⊖OH are

strong bases (as strong as NaOH)

Cannot actas bases

Page 24: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 24

3E.3E. Solubility of Amines in AqueousSolubility of Amines in AqueousAcidsAcids

R2

NR1 R3 + H X

R2

NR1 R3

H(water soluable)

X

O

R NH2

water-insoluableHX

Page 25: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 25

3F.3F. Amines as Resolving AgentsAmines as Resolving Agents Enantiomerically pure amines are

often used to resolve racemic forms of acidic compounds by the formation of diastereomeric salts

Page 26: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 26

OH

O

HO HHO

O

OHH

(R) (S)

H2N

HH3C

(R)-Amine (optically pure)

+

Racemic (R,S)-acid This is the resolving agent

O

O

HO H

(R)

H3N

HH3C

(R)

O

O

OHH

(S)

H3N

HH3C

(R)

separate(R,R)-salt (S,R)-salt

OH

O

HO H(R)-Acid

HO

O

OHH(S)-Acid

H3O+ H3O

+

Page 27: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 27

4. Preparation of Amines

4A.4A. Through Nucleophilic Substitution Through Nucleophilic Substitution ReactionsReactions

Alkylation of ammonia

XNH3

NH2

H

X

NH3

NH2

Page 28: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 28

NH2 N

H X

X H

(over-alkylation)

NH3

N

HNH3

X

N N+

X

Page 29: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 29

N N NNaN3

Alkylation of azide ion and reduction

X

NH2

Na/EtOHorLiAlH4

Page 30: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 30

The Gabriel synthesis

N

O

O

H1. KOH

2.Br

N

O

O

NH2NH2EtOH, heat

N

N

O

O

H

H

H2N +

Page 31: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 31

Alkylation of 3o amines

N

R

R

R Br+

(SN2)

N

R

R

R Br

Page 32: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 32

4B.4B. Preparation of Aromatic Amines Preparation of Aromatic Amines through Reduction of Nitro through Reduction of Nitro CompoundsCompounds

R

H

R

NO2

R

NH2HNO3

H2SO4

H2, catalyst

1. Fe, HCl2. NaOH

Page 33: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 33

4C.4C. Preparation of Primary, Secondary,Preparation of Primary, Secondary,and Tertiary Amines through Reductive and Tertiary Amines through Reductive AminationAmination

O

R R'

aldehydeor

ketone

NH3

[H]

N

R R'H

H H

1o amine

R"NH2

[H]

N

R R'H

H R"

2o amine

R"R"'NH

[H]

N

R R'H

R"' R"

3o amine

Page 34: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 34

O

R R'H2N R"+

Mechanismtwo

steps

R R'

HO NHR"

Hemiaminal

R R'

NR"(- H2O)

Imine

[H]

NHR"

R R'H

Page 35: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 35

(1) O NH2

NH3, H2/Ni

heat &pressure

Examples

(2)

O NH

1.

2. NaBH3CN

NH2

(3)O N

NH

1.

2. LiBH3CN

Page 36: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 36

4D.4D.Preparation of Primary, Secondary, Preparation of Primary, Secondary, or Tertiary Amines through or Tertiary Amines through Reduction of Nitriles, Oximes, Reduction of Nitriles, Oximes, and Amidesand Amides

R C N

H

CR N

OHor[H]

RCH2NH2

O

CR N

R'

R"

RCH2N

R'

R"

[H]

Page 37: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 37

(1) Br C

CH2NH2

NNaCN

DMSO

Ra Ni

H2Oheat

Examples

(2)

O NOH

H2N OH Na

EtOH

NH2

Page 38: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 38

Examples

(3)Cl

pyridine

NH

O

N

O

1. LiAlH42. H2O

N

Page 39: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 39

4D.4D.Preparation of Primary Amines Preparation of Primary Amines through the Hofmann and Curtius through the Hofmann and Curtius RearrangementsRearrangements

O

R NH2

Br2, NaOH

H2OR NH2

+ NaBr + Na2CO3

Hofmann rearrangement

Page 40: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 40

(1) NH2

O

Br2

NaOH

NH2

Examples

(2)

NH2

O

NH2Br2

NaOH

Page 41: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 41

MechanismO

R N

H

HOH O

R N

H

Br Br O

R N

H

Br

HO

O

R NBr

O C NR (Hofmann

rearr.)(isocyanate)

HOO C

N

OH

R

O C

N

O

R

H

+ CO2H

NR

H OHR NH2

Page 42: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 42

Curtius rearrangement

O

R Cl

NaN3O

R N N NO C N

R+ N2 (g)

heat

R NH2

H2O

CO2 (g) +

O

Cl 1. NaN3

2. heat3. H2O

NH2

e.g.

Page 43: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 43

5. Reactions of Amines

H Cl+Et3N

Acid-base reactions

Et3N H + Cl

+ BrNH2

Alkylation

BrN

H

H

Page 44: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 44

+N

H

Cl

O

Acylation

N

O(- HCl)

Page 45: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 45

NH2 NH2 NH2

E

E

E+

Electrophilic aromatic substitution

NH2: powerful activating group, ortho-para director

Page 46: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 46

5A.5A. Oxidation of AminesOxidation of Amines

R3N O

(a tertiaryamine oxide)

R3NH2O2 or

R OO

H

O

(per acid)

Page 47: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 47

6. Reactions of Amines withNitrous Acid

Nitrous acid (HONO) is a weak, unstable acid

HCl(aq) + NaNO2(aq) HONO(aq) + NaCl(aq)

H2SO4(aq) + 2 NaNO2(aq)

2 HONO(aq) + Na2SO4(aq)

Page 48: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 48

6A.6A. Reactions of Primary Aliphatic Reactions of Primary Aliphatic Amines with Nitrous AcidAmines with Nitrous Acid

1o aliphatic amine

R NH2

R N N X

NaNO2HX (HONO)

RX

alkyl halides

alcoholsH2O

- H+alkenes

(aliphatic diazonium salt)

(highly unstable)

Page 49: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 49

6B.6B. Reactions of Primary Arylamines Reactions of Primary Arylamines with Nitrous Acidwith Nitrous Acid

N N

XNaNO2

HX

R

NH2

R

(arenediazonium salt)

(stable at <5oC)

Page 50: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 50

H

NAr

H

N O

NAr

H

N OH

HONO + H3O+ + A:

Mechanism

H2O NO + H2O

+ 2 H2ON O

H

NAr

H

OH2

- H3O+

NAr

H

N OH A

Page 51: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 51

- HA + HA

NAr N OH2

Mechanism (Cont'd)

NAr

H

N OH

A

NAr N OH- HA

+ HADiazohydroxide

NAr NNAr NH2O +

diazonium ion

Page 52: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 52

6C.6C. Reactions of Secondary Reactions of Secondary Amines with Nitrous AcidAmines with Nitrous Acid

NaNO2

HCl, H2ON H N N O

N

H

N

NO

NaNO2

HCl, H2O

N-Nitroso-amines

Page 53: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 53

6D.6D.Reactions of Tertiary Amines with Reactions of Tertiary Amines with Nitrous AcidNitrous Acid

NaNO2

HCl, H2O

8oC

N N N O

NaNO2

HCl, H2OEt3N + Et3N N O ClEt3NH Cl

Page 54: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 54

7. Replacement Reactions of Arenediazonium Salts

N NHONO

0 - 5oC

R

NH2

R

Page 55: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 55

7A.7A. Syntheses Using Diazonium SaltsSyntheses Using Diazonium Salts

NN

R

R

OHCu2O, Cu2-

H2O

R

ClCuCl

CuBr

R

Br

R

CNCuCN

KI

R

I

1. HBF4

2. heat

R

F

H3PO2, H2O

R

H

Page 56: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 56

7B.7B. The Sandmeyer Reaction: The Sandmeyer Reaction: Replacement of the Diazonium Replacement of the Diazonium Group by -Cl, -Br, or -CNGroup by -Cl, -Br, or -CN

CuCl

15 - 60oC

HCl, NaNO2

H2O

0 - 5oC

N2Cl

CH3

NH2

CH3

CH3

Cl

+N2

o-Toluidine

o-Chlorotoluene(74-79% overall)

Page 57: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 57

CuBr

100oC

HBr, NaNO2

H2O

0 - 10oC

N2BrNH2

Br

+N2

m-Chloroaniline

m-Bromochlorobenzene(70% overall)

Cl Cl

Cl

Page 58: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 58

CuCN

90 - 100oC

HCl, NaNO2

H2Oroom temp.

N2Cl

NO2

NH2

NO2

NO2

Cl

+N2

o-Nitroaniline

o-Nitrobenzonitrile(65% overall)

Page 59: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 59

7C.7C. Replacement by —IReplacement by —I

KIH2SO4, NaNO2

H2O

0 - 5oC

NO2NO2 NO2

+ N2

p-Nitroaniline p-Iodonitrobenzene(81% overall)

NH2 N2HSO4 I

Page 60: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 60

7D.7D.Replacement by —FReplacement by —FCH3CH3

CH3

BF3 + N2 +

m-Toluidine

m-Fluorotoluene(69%)

NH2 N2BF4

F

(1) HONO, H+

(2) HBF4

m-Toluenediazoniumfluoroborate

(79%)

heat

Page 61: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 61

7E.7E. Replacement by —OHReplacement by —OH

CH3 CH3

p-Toluenediazoniumhydrogen sulfate

p-Cresol(93%)

N2HSO4 OH

Cu2O

Cu2+, H2O

Page 62: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 62

7F.7F. Replacement by Hydrogen: Replacement by Hydrogen: Deamination by DiazotizationDeamination by Diazotization

CH3CH3 CH3

N2 +

p-Toluidine 65%(from p-Toluidine)

NH2 HN NH2

O

O2

(1) Br2

(2) OH , H2OBrheat

H2SO4, NaNO2H2O, 0 - 5oC

H2O, 25oC

O

H3PO2

CH3

N2

Br

CH3

Br

m-Bromotoluene(85% from 2-bromo-

4-methylaniline)

Page 63: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 63

8. Coupling Reactions of Arenediazonium Salts

N N X + Q

N N Q

(Q = NR2 or OH)

(azo dyes)

Page 64: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 64

(1)

N2 Cl OH

+

NN

OH

NaOH

H2O, 0oC

(orange solid)

Examples

Page 65: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 65

(2)

N2 Cl N

+

NN

N

NaOAc

H2O, 0oC

(yellow solid)

Me

Me

Me

Me

Examples

Page 66: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 66

(3)

N2 Cl OH

+

NN

NaOHH2O

Me

HO

Me

Examples

Page 67: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 67

9. Reactions of Amines with Sulfonyl Chlorides

+

R"

NR' H Cl S Ar

O

O

R"

NR' S Ar

O

O

+ HCl

1. H3O+, heat

2. NaOH

Page 68: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 68

9A.9A. The Hinsberg TestThe Hinsberg Test

Sulfonamide formation is the basis for a chemical test, called the Hinsberg test, that can be used to demonstrate whether an amine is primary, secondary, or tertiary

Page 69: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 69

1o Amine

+

H

NR H Cl S

O

O

H

NR S

O

O

H

NR S

O

O

OH

(-HCl)

HClNR S

O

O

K

water insoluable(precipitate)

water-soluable salt(clear solution)

KOH

Page 70: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 70

2o Amine

+

R2

NR1 H Cl S

O

O

R2

NR1 S

O

O

OH

(-HCl)

water insoluable(precipitate)

Page 71: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 71

3o Amine

+

R2

NR1 R3 Cl S

O

O

R2

NR1 R3

NaOH

H3O+

water soluable

No apparentchange

H

Page 72: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 72

10.Synthesis of Sulfa Drugs

NH2

O

HNO

O2

O

HN

SO2Cl

2 HOSO2Cl

80oC

H2N R

(-HCl)

O

HN

SO2NHR

NH2

SO2NHR

1. dilute HCl, heat

2. HCO3

(-H2O)

Aniline Acetanilide

Sulfanilamide

p-Acetamidobenzene-sulfonyl chloride

Page 73: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 73

11.Analysis of Amines

11A.11A. Chemical AnalysisChemical Analysis Dissolve in dilute aqueous acid Moist pH paper

basic Hinsberg test 1o aromatic amines

azo dye formation with 2-naphthol

Page 74: Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 20 - 1 Chapter 20 Amines.

Ch. 20 - 74

11B.11B. Spectroscopic AnalysisSpectroscopic Analysis IR

●1o amines 3300 – 3555 cm-1 (N–H)

two bands●2o amines

3300 – 3555 cm-1 (N–H) one band only

●3o amines No bands at 3300 – 3555

cm-1 region

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Ch. 20 - 75

●Aliphatic amines 1020 – 1220 cm-1 (C–N)

●Aromatic amines 1250 – 1360 cm-1 (C–N)

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1H NMR spectra● 1o and 2o amines

N–H (0.5 – 5 ppm), usually broad, exact position depends on the solvent, concentration, purity and temperature

● N–H protons are not usually coupled to protons on adjacent carbons

● Protons on the carbon of an aliphatic amine are deshielded by the electron-withdrawing effect of the nitrogen and absorb typically in the 2.2–2.9 region

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● Protons on the carbon are not deshielded as much and absorb in the range 1.0–1.7

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13C NMR spectra

NH223.0 34.0

14.3 29.7 42.5

13C NMR chemical shifts ()

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Mass spectra● The molecular ion in the mass

spectrum of an amine has an odd number mass (unless there is an even number of nitrogen atoms in the molecule)

● The peak for the molecular ion is usually strong for aromatic and cyclic aliphatic amines but weak for acyclic aliphatic amines

● Cleavage between the and carbons of aliphatic amines is a common mode of fragmentation

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12.Eliminations Involving Ammonium Compounds

12A.12A. The Hofmann EliminationThe Hofmann Elimination

H

NR3

A quaternaryammoniumhydroxide

OH

HOH

+

heat

NR3

+

An alkene

A tertiaryamine

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A quaternaryammonium

halide

RNMe3X

Ag2O

H2O

+ 2 AgX

A quaternaryammoniumhydroxide

RNMe3HO

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Although most eliminations involving neutral substrates tend to follow the Zaitsev rule, eliminations with charged substrates tend to follow what is called the Hofmann rule and yield mainly the least substituted alkene 75%Br

+ NaBr + EtOH+EtONa

EtOH

25oC25%

5%NMe3

+ NMe3 + H2O+ OH

150oC95%

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H

NMe3

Carbanion-liketransition state

(gives Hofmann orientation)

HO

H

Br

HO

Alkene-liketransition state

(gives Zaitsev orientation)

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12B.12B. The Cope EliminationThe Cope Elimination

+N

Me

O150oCMe

R

H

RO N

H

Me

Me

A tertiaryamine oxide

An alkene N,N-Dimethyl-hydroxylamine

H

N

O

e.g.

heatN OH+

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13.Summary of Preparations and Reactions of Amines

Preparation of amines

R NH2

N

O

O

H

1. KOH2. R-X3. NH2NH2, EtOH, heat

R Br

1. NaN32. LiAlH4

R Br

NH3R NO2

H2, cat. or1. Fe, HCl2. NaOH

O

R1 R2R =

R1 R2

NH3[H]

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R NH2

N

R1 R2R =

R1 R2

OH

NaEtOH

1. LiAlH42. H2O

C NR

O

R NH2

1. LiAlH42. H2O

(R = R1CH2)

O

R NH2

Br2NaOH

1. NaN32. heat3. H2O

O

R Cl

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Reactions of amines

R NH2

H X

RNH3 X

R N

H

S

O

O

Ar

ClS

O

O

Ar1. , NaOH

2. HCl

O

R' Cl

O

R'NR

base

H

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Ar NH2

N2

Q

NN

Q

(Q = NR2 or OH)

HONO

0-5oCAr N2

Ar OHH2O

Cu2O, Cu2+

Ar ClCuCl

Ar BrCuBr

Ar CNCuCN

Ar IKI

Ar F1. HBF4

2. heat

Ar HH3PO2

H2O

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H

NR3

+ H2O + NR3heat

OH+

Hofmann Elimination

Cope Elimination

NMe

H OMe

syn elimination

heat

MeN

Me

OH

+

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END OF CHAPTER 21


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