Title: Spectroscopy of Amines - IR
1Spectroscopy of Amines - IR
- Characteristic NH stretching absorptions 3300 to
3500 cm-1. NH2 group shows an irregular doublet,
NH - weak multiple bands. Ammonium ions show N-H
at 2600 cm-1. Amine absorption bands are sharper
and less intense than hydroxyl bands. 1o amines
show NH2 deformation band at 1650-1590 cm-1. - C-N stretching vibrations are found at 1090-1068
cm-1 in 1o amines with a 1o a carbon, 1140-1080
cm-1 with a 2o a carbon, and at 1240-1170 cm-1
with a 3o a carbon. 3o amines show no C-N
vibrations. In aromatic amines, this band is at
1330-1260 cm-1. - N-H wagging bands are found at 850-750 cm-1 as
strong, broad, multiple bands. These are weak in
aromatic amines.
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4Mass Spectrometry
- Since N is a compound with an odd number of
nitrogen atoms has an odd-numbered molecular
weight and a corresponding parent ion - Alkylamines cleave at the CC bond nearest the
nitrogen to yield an alkyl radical and a
nitrogen-containing cation
5Mass Spectrum of N-Ethylpropylamine
- The two modes of a cleavage give fragment ions at
m/z 58 and m/z 72.
61H - NMR Spectroscopy
- NH hydrogens appear as broad signals, either
fully coupled to neighboring CH hydrogens, or
more frequently with no coupling (just like the
H-bonded OH signals) - Hydrogens on C next to N and absorb at lower
field than alkane hydrogens - N-CH3 gives a sharp three-H singlet at d 2.2 to
2.6
7C3H9NO
8C4H11NO2
9C8H11NO
10C9H13N
11C15H17N
12C6H15N - IR
13C6H15N - 1H-NMR
14Structure, Properties and Reactivity of Amines
- Organic derivatives of ammonia, NH3
- Nitrogen atom with a lone pair of electrons,
making amines both basic and nucleophilic - Occur in plants and animals
15IUPAC nomenclature of simple amines
- For simple amines, the suffix -amine is added to
the name of the alkyl substituent
- The suffix -amine can also be used in place of
the final -e in the name of the parent compound
16IUPAC nomenclature of simple amines
- Alkyl-substituted (alkylamines) or
aryl-substituted (arylamines) - Classified 1 (RNH2), methyl (CH3NH2), 2
(R2NH), 3 (R3N)
17IUPAC nomenclature of complex amines.Amines with
more than one functional group.
- Consider the NH2 as an amino substituent on the
parent molecule
18IUPAC nomenclature of complex amines.Amines with
multiple alkyl groups.
- Symmetrical secondary and tertiary amines are
named by adding the prefix di- or tri- to the
alkyl group
19IUPAC nomenclature of complex amines.Amines with
multiple different alkyl groups.
- Named as N-substituted primary amines
- Largest alkyl group is the parent name, and other
alkyl groups are considered N-substituents
20Common Names
- Alkylamines do not have common names unless they
are biological molecules, such as putrycine
(1,6-hexanediamine) - or cadaverine (1,7-heptanediamine)
- Simple arylamines have common names
21Common Names of Heterocyclic Amines
- If the nitrogen atom occurs as part of a ring,
the compound is designated as being heterocyclic - Each ring system has its own parent name
22Quaternary Ammonium Ions
- A nitrogen atom with four attached groups is
positively charged - Compounds are quaternary ammonium salts
23Structure and Bonding in Amines
- Bonding to N is similar to that in ammonia
- N is sp3-hybridized
- CNC bond angles are close to 109 tetrahedral
value
24Basicity of Amines
- The lone pair of electrons on nitrogen makes
amines basic and nucleophilic - They react with acids to form acidbase salts and
they react with electrophiles - Amines are stronger bases than alcohols, ethers,
or water - Amines establish an equilibrium with water in
which the amine becomes protonated and hydroxide
is produced
25Amines as Acids
- Loss of the NH proton requires a very strong base
26Synthesis of Amines
SN2 Reactions of Alkyl Halides
- Ammonia and other amines are good nucleophiles
27Uncontrolled Multiple Alkylation are Unavoidable
when Sterically Un-hindered Amines React
28- Reduction of nitriles and amides
29Reduction Aryl Nitro Compounds
- Arylamines are prepared from nitration of an
aromatic compound and reduction of the nitro
group - Reduction by catalytic hydrogenation over
platinum is suitable if no other groups can be
reduced - Iron, zinc, tin, and tin(II) chloride are
effective in acidic solution
30Selective Preparation of Primary Aminesthe
Azide Synthesis
- Azide ion, N3- displaces a halide ion from a
primary or secondary alkyl halide to give an
alkyl azide, RN3 - Alkyl azides are not nucleophilic (but they are
explosive) - Reduction gives the primary amine
31Gabriel Synthesis of Primary Amines
- A phthalimide alkylation for preparing a primary
amine from an alkyl halide - The N-H in imides (-CONHCO-) can be removed by
KOH followed by alkylation and hydrolysis
32Hofmann and Curtius Rearrangements
- Carboxylic acid derivatives can be converted into
primary - amines with loss of one carbon atom by both the
Hofmann - rearrangement and the Curtius rearrangement
33Hofmann Rearrangement (Mechanism) Part I
- RCONH2 reacts with Br2 and base to give electron
- deficient nitrogen
34Hofmann Rearrangement (Mechanism) Part II
Alkyl group (-R) migrates to the neighboring
electron-deficient nitrogen. Hydration of the
resultant isocyanate gives carboxamic acid.
35Hofmann Rearrangement (Mechanism) Part III
Deprotonation-reprotonation produces a
protonated ammonium zwitterion (a good leaving
group). Its elimination produces the amine and
carbon dioxide by-product.
36Curtius Rearrangement
- Heating an acyl azide prepared from substitution
an acid chloride - This rearrangement also involves migration of R
from CO to the neighboring electron-deficient
nitrogen with simultaneous loss of a leaving group
37Reactions of Amines
- Acylation leads to amides (1o, 2o, or 3o.)
38Hofmann Elimination
- Converts amines into alkenes
- NH2- is very a poor leaving group so it converted
to an alkylammonium ion, which is a good leaving
group
39Silver Oxide Is Used for the Elimination Step
- Exchanges hydroxide ion for iodide ion in the
quaternary - ammonium salt, thus providing the base necessary
to cause - elimination
40Orientation in Hofmann Elimination
- We would expect that the more highly substituted
alkene product predominates in the E2 reaction of
an alkyl halide (Zaitsev's rule) - However, the less highly substituted alkene
predominates in the Hofmann elimination due to
the large size of the trialkylamine leaving group - The base must abstract a hydrogen from the most
sterically accessible, least hindered position
41Steric Effects Control the Orientation