10D. Amines Flashcards

1
Q

Amines

A
  • organic compounds derived from ammonia in which one or more hydrogen atoms is replaced with organic groups
  • the functional group of an amine is an amino group - a nitrogen bonded to one, two or three carbon atoms

C - N

  • amines are classified as primary (1o), secondary (2o) or tertiary (3o), depending on the number of carbon groups attached to the nitrogen
  • primary amines have one carbon group attached to the nitrogen atom
  • secondary amines have two carbon groups attached to the nitrogen atom
  • tertiary amines have three carbon groups attached to the nitrogen atom
  • amines are further classified as aliphatic or aromatic
  • for alyphatic amines, the nitrogen is bonded only to alkyl groups or hydrogen atoms
  • for aromatic amines, the nitrogen is bonded to one or more aromatic rings
  • an amine in which the nitrogen atom is part of a ring is a heterocyclic amine. When the ring is saturated, it is classified as a heterocyclic aliphatic amine. When the ring is aromatic, it is classified as a heterocyclic aromatic amine
  • structurally, an amine has a similar shape to ammonia, with four regions of alectron density about the nitrogen atom, making it tetrahedral. The bond angles are 108.7o because nitrogen has one unshared pair of electrons. These electrons form one corner of the tetrahedron, + are therefore out in space . This is important as this unshared electron pair is involved in almost all reactions of amines
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2
Q

Naming

A
  • similar to alcohols, except that the parent chain contains the amino group+ the final -e of the parent alkane is replaced by -amine + the location of the amino group is shown
  • the simplest aromatic amine retains the common name of aniline. Its simple derivatives use numbers or the locators ortho (o), meta )m) or para (p) to locate substituents
  • unsymmetrical secondary + tertiary amines are commonly named as N-substituted primary amines. The largest group bonded to nitrogen is the parent amine + the smaller groups bonded to nitrogen are named with their locations indicated by the prefix N - indicating that they are bonded to nitrogen
  • common names for most aliphatic amines list the groups bonded to nitrogen in alphabetical order in one word + ending in the suffix -amine
  • when four atoms or groups of aoms are bonded to a nitrogen atom, nitrogen has a positive charge + is associated with an ion as a salt. The compound is named as a salt of the corresponding amine. The ending -amine is replaced with -ammonium, followed by the name of the anion
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3
Q

Physical Properties

A
  • like ammonia, low molecular weight amines have very sharp, penetrating odours
  • amines are polar compounds because of the difference in electronegativity between nitrogen + hydrogen, producing a partial negative charge on the nitrogen atom + a partial positive charge on each of the attached hydrogen atoms
  • primary + secondary amines form strong hydrogen bonds with each other + with water
  • tertiary amines do not form hydrogen bonds with each other because there is no hydrogen bonded to the nitrogen, but they can form hydrogen bonds with water
  • amines have higher boiling points than alkanes but lower than alcohols of comparable molecular weigh
  • tertiary amines generally boil at lower temperatures than primary + secondary amines of comparable molecular weight as a result of the difference in hydrogen bonding
  • all amines are more solyble in water that hydrocarbons of comparable molecular weight
  • most low molecular weight amines are completely soluble in water, but higher molecular weight amines are only moderately soluble in water or insoluble
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4
Q

Reactions

A
  • most important chemical property of amines is their basicity
  • amines react with strong acids to form water-soluble salts
  • the basicity of amines + solubility of amine salts in water provides a way to separate water-insoluble amines from water-insoluble non basic compounds
  • all aliphatic amines have approximately the same base strength + are slightly stronger bases than ammonia
  • aromatic amines + heterocyclic aromatic amines are considerably weaker bases that aliphatic amines
  • while aliphatic amines are weak bases by comparison with inorganic bases, they are strong bases among organic compounds
  • for the acid-base reaction between an amine + water, the unshared pair of electrons on nitrogen forms a new covalent bond with hydrogen + displaces a hydroxide ion
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