
The general structure of an amine
'Amines' are
organic compounds and a type of
functional group that contain
nitrogen as the key atom. Structurally amines resemble
ammonia, wherein one or more
hydrogen atoms are replaced by organic
substituents such as
alkyl and
aryl groups. An important exception to this rule is that compounds of the type RC(O)NR
2, where the C(O) refers to a
carbonyl group, are called
amides rather than amines. Amides and amines have different structures and properties, so the distinction is
chemically important. Somewhat confusing is the fact that amines in which an N-H group has been replaced by an N-M group (M = metal) are also called amides. Thus (CH
3)
2NLi is lithium dimethylamide.
Amines are central in organic chemistry, all life processes known, as the core part of
amino acids.
See the for a list of types of amine and some real examples of this class of chemical.
Introduction
===
Aliphatic Amines===
As displayed in the images below, 'primary amines' arise when one of three hydrogen atoms in ammonia is replaced by an organic substituent. 'Secondary amines' have two organic substituents bound to N together with one H. In 'tertiary amines' all three hydrogen atoms are replaced by organic substituents. Note: the subscripts on the 'R' groups are simply used to differentiate the organic substituents . However, the number subscripts on the H atoms show how many H atoms there are in that group. It is also possible to have four alkyl substituents on the nitrogen. These compounds have a charged nitrogen center, and necessarily come with a negative counterion, so they are called quaternary
ammonium salts.
| Primary amine | Secondary amine | Tertiary amine |
|---|
 primary amine |  secondary amine |  tertiary amine |
Similarly, an organic compound with multiple amino groups is called a 'diamine', 'triamine', 'tetraamine' and so forth.
Aromatic amines
Main articles: Aromatic amines
Aromatic amines have the nitrogen atom connected to an
aromatic ring as in
anilines. The aromatic ring strongly decreases the
basicity of the amine, depending on its substituents. Interestingly, the presence of an amine group strongly increases the reactivity of the aromatic ring, due to an electron-donating effect. One
organic reaction involving aromatic amines is the
Goldberg reaction.
Naming conventions
★ the prefix "N-" shows substitution on the nitrogen atom
★ as prefix: "amino-"
★ as suffix: "-amine"
★ remember that chemical compounds are not proper nouns, so lower case is indicated throughout.
Systematic names for some common amines:
Lower amines are named with the suffix ''-amine''.
'methylamine' | Higher amines have the prefix ''amino'' as a functional group.
'2-aminopentane' (or sometimes: ''pent-2-yl-amine'' or ''pentane-2-amine'') |
★ 'Primary amines':
★
★
methylamine
★
★
ethanolamine or 2-aminoethanol
★
★
trisamine (or more commonly
tris) (Its
HCl salt is used as a
pH buffering agent in
biochemistry)
★ 'Secondary amines':
★
★
dimethylamine
★
★
methylethanolamine or 2-(methylamino)ethanol
★
★
Cyclic amines:
★
★
★
aziridine (3-member ring),
★
★
★
azetidine (4-member ring),
★
★
★
pyrrolidine (5-member ring) and
★
★
★
piperidine (6-member ring)
★ 'Tertiary amines':
★
★
trimethylamine
★
★
methyldiethanolamine (MDEA)
★
★
dimethylethanolamine (DMEA) or 2-(dimethylamino)ethanol
★
★
bis-tris (It is used as a pH buffering agent in biochemistry)
Physical properties
General properties
#
Hydrogen bonding significantly influences the properties of primary and secondary amines as well as the protonated derivatives of all amines. Thus the
boiling point of amines is higher than those for the corresponding
phosphines, but generally lower than the corresponding
alcohols. Alcohols, or alkanols, resemble amines but feature an -OH group in place of NR
2. Since oxygen is more
electronegative than nitrogen, RO-''H'' is typically more acidic than the related R
2N-''H'' compound.
# Methyl-, dimethyl-, trimethyl-, and
ethylamine are gases under standard conditions, while
diethylamine and
triethylamine are liquids. Most other common alkyl amines are liquids; high
molecular weight amines are, of course, solids.
# Gaseous amines possess a characteristic ammonia smell, liquid amines have a distinctive "fishy" smell.
# Most aliphatic amines display some solubility in water, reflecting their ability to form hydrogen bonds. Solubility decreases with the increase in the number of carbon atoms, especially when the carbon atom number is greater than 6.
# Aliphatic amines display significant solubility in organic
solvents, especially polar organic solvents. Primary amines react with
ketones such as
acetone, and most amines are incompatible with
chloroform and
carbon tetrachloride.
# The aromatic amines, such as
aniline, have their lone pair electrons
conjugated into the benzene ring, thus their tendency to engage in hydrogen bonding is diminished. Otherwise they display the following properties:
#
★ Their boiling points are usually still high due to their larger size.
#
★ Diminished solubility in water, although they retain their solubility in suitable organic solvents only.
#
★ They are toxic and are easily absorbed through the skin: thus hazardous.

amine inversion
Chirality
Tertiary amines of the type NHRR' and NRR'R" are
chiral: the nitrogen atom bears four distinct substituents counting the lone pair. The energy barrier for the
inversion of the stereocenter is relatively low, e.g. ~7 kcal/mol for a trialkylamine. The interconversion of the stereoisomers has been compared to the inversion of an open umbrella in to a strong wind. Because of this low barrier, amines such as NHRR' cannot be resolved optically and NRR'R" can only be resolved when the R, R', and R" groups are constrained in cyclic structures.
Properties as bases
Like ammonia, amines act as
bases and are reasonably strong (see table for examples of
conjugate acid K
a values). The basicity of amines depends on:
#The availability of the lone pair of electrons on the Nitrogen atom.
#The electronic properties of the substituents (alkyl groups enhance the basicity, aryl groups diminish it).
#The degree of solvation of the protonated amine.
The nitrogen atom features a
lone electron pair that can bind H
+ to form an
ammonium ion R
3NH
+. The lone electron pair is represented in this article by a two dots above or next to the N. The water
solubility of simple amines is largely due to
hydrogen bonding between protons on the water molecules and these lone electron pairs.
★
Inductive effect of alkyl groups
: +I effect of alkyl groups raises the energy of the lone pair of electrons, thus elevating the basicity.
★
Mesomeric effect of aromatic systems
: +M effect of aromatic ring delocalise the lone pair electron into the ring, resulting in decreased basicity.
The degree of protonation of protonated amines:
| Ions of compound | Maximum number of H-bond |
|---|
| NH4+ | 4 Very Soluble in H2O |
| RNH3+ | 3 |
| R2NH2+ | 2 |
| R3NH+ | 1 Least Soluble in H2O |
Synthesis
The following laboratory methods exist for the preparation of amines:
★ via the
Gabriel synthesis:

The Gabriel synthesis
★ via
azides by the
Staudinger reduction.
★ From
carboxylic acids in the
Schmidt reaction.
★
Allylic amines can be prepared from
imines in the
Aza-Baylis-Hillman reaction.
★ via
Hofmann degradation of amides. This reaction is valid for preparation of primary amines only. Gives good yields of primary amines uncontaminated with other amines.

The Hofmann rearrangment
★
Quaternary ammonium salts upon treatment with strong base undergo the so-called
Hofmann Elimination
★
Reduction of
nitriles,
amides and
nitro compounds:

Nitrile reduction
:
Nitriles are reduced to amines using hydrogen in the presence of a nickel catalyst, although acidic or alkaline conditions should be avoided to avoid hydrolysis of -CN group. LiAlH
4 is more commonly employed for the reduction of nitriles on the laboratory scale. Similarly, LiAlH
4 reduces amides to amines:

Reduction of amides to amines
: The reduction of nitro compounds to amines can be accomplished with elemental
zinc,
tin or
iron with an
acid.
★ Nucleophilic substitution of haloalkanes. Primary amines can also be synthesized by alkylaton of ammonia.
Haloalkanes react with amines to give a corresponding alkyl-substituted amine, with the release of a halogen acid. Such reactions, which are most useful for alkyl iodides and bromides, are rarely employed because the degree of alkylation is difficult to control. If the reacting amine is tertiary, a
quaternary ammonium cation results. Many
quaternary ammonium salts can be prepared by this route with diverse R groups and many halide and pseudohalide anions.

Amine alkylation

Amine alkylation
★ via halides and hexamine in the
Delepine reaction
★ aryl amines can be obtained from amines and aryl halides in the
Buchwald-Hartwig reaction
★ from alkenes and alkynes in
hydroamination
Reactions
Amines react in a variety of ways:
★ By
nucleophilic acyl substitution.
Acyl chlorides and
acid anhydrides react with primary and secondary amines in cold to form
amides in the
Schotten-Baumann reaction. Tertiary amines cannot be acylated due to the absence of a replaceable hydrogen atom. With the much less active
benzoyl chloride,
acylation can still be performed by the use of excess aqeous alkali to facilitate the reaction.

Amide formation
:Because amines are basic, they neutralize
carboxylic acids to form the corresponding ammonium carboxylate salts. Upon heating to 200 °C, the primary and secondary amine salts dehydrate to form the corresponding
amides.

Amine reaction with carboxylic acids
★ By ammonium salt formation. Amines R
3N react with strong acids such as
hydroiodic acid,
hydrobromic acid and
hydrochloric acid in neutralization reactions forming
ammonium salts R
3NH
+.
★ By
diazonium salt formation.
Nitrous acid with formula HNO
2 is unstable, therefore usually a mixture of NaNO
2 and dilute
hydrochloric acid or
sulfuric acid is used to produce nitrous acid indirectly. Primary aliphatic amines with nitrous acid give very unstable diazonium salts which spontaneously decompose by losing N
2 to form carbonium ion. The carbonium ion goes on to produce a mixture of alkenes, alkanols or alkyl halides, with alkanols as the major product. This reaction is of little synthetic importance because the diazonium salt formed is too unstable, even at cold conditions.
: NaNO
2 + HCl → HNO
2 + NaCl

Nitrous acid reaction
:Primary aromatic amines, such as
aniline (phenylamine) form more stable
diazonium ions at 0–5 °C. Above 5 °C, they will decompose to give
phenol and N
2. Arenediazonium salts can be isolated in the crystalline form but are usually used in solution immediately after preparation, due to rapid decomposition on standing even when cold. The solid arenediazonium salt is explosive upon shock or mild warming. Because of their greater stability, arenediazonium salts are more synthetically useful than their alliphatic counterparts. Since it is not necessary to isolate the diazonium salt, once it is formed another reagent such as
cuprous cyanide can simply be added to the mixture, and with gentle heating of the solution, a replacement reaction takes place along with the evolution of nitrogen. In addition, arenediazonium ions can also undergo a coupling reaction with a highly activated aromatic compound such as a
phenol to form an
azo compound.

Aromatic diazonium salts
★ By
imine formation. Primary amines react with
ketones and
aldehydes to form
imines. In the case of
formaldehyde (R' = H), these products are typically cyclic
trimers.
: RNH
2 + R'
2C=O → R'
2C=NR + H
2O
:Secondary amines react with ketones and aldehydes to form
enamines
: R
2NH + R'(R"CH
2)C=O → R"CH=C(NR
2)R' + H
2O
★ By
oxidation to
nitroso compounds, for instance with
peroxymonosulfuric acid.
★ By reduction of
quaternary ammonium cations to tertiary amines in the
Emde degradation.
★ By rearrangement of N-alkyl anilines to aryl substituted anilines in the
Hofmann-Martius rearrangement.
★ primary and secondary amines react with pyridinium salts in the
Zincke reaction
Biological activity
Amines have strong, characteristic, disagreeable odors, and are toxic. The smells of ammonia, fish, urine, rotting flesh and semen are all mainly composed of amines. Many kinds of biological activity produce amines by breakdown of
amino acids.
Use of amines
Dyes
Primary aromatic amines are used as a starting material for the manufacture of
azo dyes. It reacts with nitric(III) acid to form diazonium salt which can undergo coupling reaction to form azo compound. As azo-compounds are highly coloured, they are widely used in dyeing industries, such as:
★
Methyl orange
★
Direct brown 138
★
Sunset yellow FCF
★
Ponceau
Drugs
★
Chlorpheniramine is an antihistamine that helps to relieve allergic disorders due to cold, hay fever, itchy skin, insect bites and stings.
★
Chlorpromazine is a tranquillizer that sedates without inducing sleep. It is used to relieve anxiety, excitement, restlessness or even mental disorder.
★
Ephedrine and
Phenylephrine, as amine hydrochlorides, are used as decongestants.
★
Amphetamine,
Methamphetamine, and
Methcathinone are amines that are listed as controlled substances by the
DEA.
★
Amitriptyline,
Imipramine,
Lofepramine and
Clomipramine are
tricylic antidepressants and tertiary amines
★
Nortriptyline,
Desipramine, and
Amoxapine are tricyclic antidepressants and secondary amines
★ (The tricylics are grouped by the nature of the final amine group on the side chain.)
Gas Treatment
★ Aqueous
monoethanolamine (MEA), diglycolamine (DGA),
diethanolamine (DEA), diisopropanolamine (DIPA) and
methyldiethanolamine (MDEA) are widely used industrially for removing
carbon dioxide (CO
2) and
hydrogen sulphide (H
2S) from natural gas streams and refinery process streams. They may also be used to remove CO
2 from combustion gases / flue gases and may have potential for abatement of greenhouse gases.
See also
★
IUPAC nomenclature for the official naming rules for amines.
★
Biogenic amine
★
Acid-base extraction
★
Amine gas treating