Amines, amino acids and polymers Flashcards
What are amines?
Organic compounds, derived from NH3, where one or more hydrogen atoms in ammonia have been replaced by a carbon chain or ring.
In an aromatic amine, the nitrogen atom is attached to an aromatic ring.
How are amines classified?
Primary amines have 1 alkyl or aryl group attached to the nitrogen atom.
Secondary amines have 2 alkyl groups attached to the nitrogen atom.
Tertiary amines have 3 alkyl groups attached to the nitrogen atom.
What is serotonin?
An amine that acts as a neurotransmitter, which controls appetite, sleep, memory and learning, temperature regulation, muscle contraction, and depression.
What is pseudoephedrine?
An amine that is an active ingredient in decongestion medications such as in nose drops and in cold remedies.
It works by shrinking nasal membranes and inhibiting nasal secretions.
How are primary amines named?
If the NH2 group is at the end of the carbon chain, the suffix -amine is added to the name of the alkyl chain.
If the amine group is on any other carbon atom, the prefix amino- and a number is added to indicate the position of the amine group.
How are secondary and tertiary amines named?
If it contains the same alkyl group, the prefixes di or tri are used to indicate the number of alkyl groups attached to the nitrogen atom.
When 2 or more different groups are attached to a nitrogen atom, the compound is named as a N-substituted derivative of the larger group.
E.g. N-methylpropylamine.
N-ethyl-N-methylpropylamine.
How are amines bases?
Amines have a lone pair of electrons on the nitrogen atom so can accept a proton.
When an amine accepts a proton, a dative covalent bond is formed between the lone pair and the proton.
What is salt formation from amines?
Amines can neutralise acids to make salts.
Propylamine reacts with hydrochloric acid to form propylammonium chloride.
CH3CH2CH2NH2 + HCl –> CH3CH2CH2NH3+Cl-
Ethylamine reacts with sulfuric acid to form ethylammonium sulfate.
2CH3CH2NH2 + H2SO4 –> (CH3CH2NH3+)2SO42-
What is the formation of primary amines?
The lone pair of electrons on the nitrogen means ammonia acts as a nucleophile in a substitution reaction with a haloalkane, to produce an ammonium salt.
Aqueous alkali is then added to form the amine.
What are the conditions for forming amines?
Hot ethanol is used as a solvent to prevent any substitution of the haloalkane by water to produce alcohols.
Excess ammonia is used to reduce further substitutions of the amine to form secondary and tertiary amines.
What is an example of forming a primary amine?
CH3CH2CH2Cl + NH3 –> CH3CH2CH2NH3+Cl-
1-chloropropane + ammonia –> propylammonium chloride
CH3CH2CH2NH3+Cl- + NaOH –> CH3CH2CH2NH2 + NaCl + H2O
Propylammonium chloride + NaOH –> Propylamine
What is formation of a secondary or tertiary amine?
Primary amines formed from nucleophilic substitution of a haloalkane still have a lone pair of electrons on the nitrogen atom that can react with a haloalkane to form a secondary amine.
Tertiary amines can be formed by further reaction of the secondary amine.
What is an example of forming a secondary and tertiary amine?
CH3CH2CH2Cl + CH3CH2CH2NH2 –> (CH3CH2CH2)2NH2+Cl-
1-chloropropane + propylamine –> dipropylammonium chloride salt
(CH3CH2CH2)2NH2+Cl- + NaOH –> (CH3CH2CH2)2NH + NaCl + H2O
forms dipropylamine, and then tripropylamine if further substituted.
What is the preparation of aromatic amines?
Phenylamine is made by the reduction of nitrobenzene, by heating it under reflux with tin and hydrochloric acid.
This forms phenylammonium chloride (salt), which is reacted with excess NaOH to form phenylamine.
C6H5NO2 + 6[H] –Sn/conc HCl, excess NaOH –> C6H5NH2 + 2H2O
How do you form an amine from a nitrile?
Nitriles can be reduced to amines by reacting with hydrogen and a Nickel catalyst.
CH3CH2C≡N + 2H2 —> CH3CH2CH2NH2