3.11 Amines Flashcards

1
Q

What are amines?

A

Organic compounds containing a nitrogen atom.

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2
Q

What are primary amines?

A

When one hydrogen on the nitrogen has been replaced by an alkyl or aryl group

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3
Q

What are secondary amines?

A

When two hydrogens on the nitrogen have been replaced by an alkyl or aryl group

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4
Q

What are tertiary amines?

A

When all three hydrogens on the nitrogen have been replaced

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5
Q

Describe how you name a secondary amine

A

N-branch main chain amine

Eg N-methylethanamine

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6
Q

How are tertiary amines named?

A

Named in a similar way to secondary amines using an N- to show that each smaller chain is attached via the nitrogen. Smaller chains named in alphabetical order.

Eg. N-ethyl-N-methylpropan-1-amine

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7
Q

Are amines weak or strong bases?

A

Amines are weak bases, the lone pair on the nitrogen can accept a proton.

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8
Q

What affects the base strength of an amine?

A

Base strength depends on how well N lone pair can accept H+. The higher the electron density of the N lone pair, the stronger the base.

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9
Q

As you move from aromatic amines, to primary, then secondary, then tertiary amines, does the base strength increase or decrease?

A

Increase in base strength

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10
Q

Why are tertiary amines the strongest amine base?

A

Tertiary amines are the strongest base as the 3 alkyl groups push electron density towards Nitrogen, meaning the highest electron density is on the lone pair, making it more available.

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11
Q

Why are aromatic amines the weakest amine base?

A

The lone pair of electrons on nitrogen is partially delocalised into the benzene ring, making it less available.

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12
Q

How are amines formed?

A

Through nucleophilic substitution of ammonia with a haloalkane

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13
Q

How are secondary and tertiary amines formed, as well as quaternary ammonium salts?

A

Through the nucleophilic substitution of haloalkanes with either a primary amine, secondary amine, or tertiary amine.

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14
Q

How can you make primary amines without the issue of further substitution?

A

You can instead make primary amines from halo alkanes by reduction of a nitrile in a two step synthesis. Eg reacting bromomethane with KCN to form ethanenitrile, then reducing this to ethanamine

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15
Q

What can be used to reduce nitriles to form amines?

A

LiAlH4 eg RCN + 4[H] with this forms RCH2NH2

Or

H2 and a nickel catalyst

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16
Q

How can you synthesise aromatic amines?

A

By synthesising nitrobenzene, then reducing this to amino benzene using tin and HCl (6[H])