Chapter-13 Amines: Amines: Amines Are Regarded As Derivatives of Ammonia in Which Alkyl or Aryl Group Replaces
Chapter-13 Amines: Amines: Amines Are Regarded As Derivatives of Ammonia in Which Alkyl or Aryl Group Replaces
Chapter-13 Amines: Amines: Amines Are Regarded As Derivatives of Ammonia in Which Alkyl or Aryl Group Replaces
Amines
Amines: Amines are regarded as derivatives of ammonia in which alkyl or aryl group replaces
one,two or all three hydrogen atoms.
They can be classified into primary, secondary or tertiary amines depending upon whether two
or three H atoms of ammonia have been replaced by alkyl or aryl groups
Primary
Secondary
Tertiary
Primary
. Write IUPAC names of the following compounds and classify them into
primary,secondary and tertiary amines.
(i) (CH3)2 (ii) (iii) (iv) (CH3)3CNH2
CHNH2 CH3(CH2)2NH2 CH3NHCH(CH3)2
2-Methylpropan-2-
Propan-2-amine Propan-1-amine N−Methyl,Propan-2- amine (10 amine)
(10 amine) (10 amine) amine
(20 amine)
Preparation of amines:
CONVERT
NitroBenzene to Aniline
Chloroethane to ethanamine
2. By reduction of nitriles:
3. By reduction of amides: Amides are reduced to corresponding amines by LiAlH4
4. By Gabriel phthalimide synthesis: Gabriel synthesis is used for the preparation of
1. Solubility: Lower aliphatic amine is soluble in water because they can form hydrogen
bonding with water. Solubility decreases with increases in molar mass of amines due to
increase in size of hydrophobic group.
2. Boiling points: Among the isomeric amines primary and secondary amines have high
boiling point because they can form hydrogen bonding. Tertiary amine cannot form
hydrogen bonding due to the absence of hydrogen atom available for hydrogen bond
formation. Hence order of boiling of isomeric amines is Primary>Secondary> Tertiary
Reactions of amines:
1. Acylation Reaction: Aliphatic and aromatic primary and secondary amines (which contain
replaceable hydrogen atoms) react with acid chlorides, anhydrides and esters to form
substituted amide. Process of introducing an acyl group (R-CO-) into the molecule is called
acylation. The reaction is carried out in the presence of a stronger base than the amine, like
pyridine, which removes HCl formed and shifts the equilibrium to the product side
2. Carbylamine reaction: Only aliphatic and aromatic primary amines on heating with
chloroform and ethanolic potassium hydroxide form isocyanides or carbylamines
b. Primary aromatic amines on reaction with nitrous acid (HNO2) in cold (273-278 K) forms
diazonium salt
4. Reaction with benzene sulphonyl chloride: Hinsberg’s reagentBenzenesulphonyl chloride
(C6H5SO2Cl) reacts with primary and secondary amines to form sulphonamides
5. Ring substitution in aromatic amine: Aniline is more reactive than benzene and
undergoes electrophilic substitution reaction preferably at ortho and para position.
a. Bromination: Aniline reacts with bromine water at room temperature to give a white
precipitate of 2, 4, 6-tribromoaniline
b. Nitration:
i. Under strongly acidic medium aniline gets protonated to form anilinium ion, which is
deactivating group and is meta directing. Hence minitroaniline is also formed in 47 %
along with ortho and para products.
ii. Nitration by protecting the –NH2 group by acetylation reaction with acetic anhydride:
c. Sulphonation: Aniline reacts with conc. H2SO4 to form aniliniumhydrogensulphate which on
heating with sulphuric acid at 453-473K produces p-aminobenzenesulphonic acid, commonly
known as sulphanilic acid, as the major product
reaction.
Problems
1. How will you convert:
a. Methanol to ethanoic acid
b. Ethanamine into methanamine
2. An aromatic compound ‘A’ on treatment with aqueous ammoniaand heatingforms
compound ‘B’ which on heating with Br2 and KOHforms a compound ‘C’ofmolecularformula
C6H7N. Write the structuresand IUPAC names of compounds A, B and C.
3. Describe the Hinsberg’s test for identification of primary, secondary andtertiary amines.
Also write the chemical equations of the reactions involved.
4. Give one chemical test to distinguish between the following pairs of compounds:
a. ethylamine and aniline
b. methylamine and methanol
c. methylamine and N, N-dimethylamine
5. Why do amines act as nucleophiles? Give example of a reaction in whichmethylamine acts
as a nucleophile.