NCERT Chemistry Class 12 - Chapter 13: Amines - Notes

ऐमीन

Learning Objectives

  • Understand classification and nomenclature of amines
  • Learn preparation methods and physical properties
  • Study basicity of amines and factors affecting it
  • Learn important reactions including diazotisation
  • Distinguish between primary, secondary, and tertiary amines

Key Concepts

Classification

Primary (1°): R-NH₂ (one alkyl/aryl group). Secondary (2°): R₂NH. Tertiary (3°): R₃N.

Aliphatic amines: R groups are alkyl. Aromatic amines (aryl): -NH₂ attached to benzene ring (aniline: C₆H₅NH₂).

Preparation

  • Alkylation of NH₃ (Hofmann): NH₃ + RX → RNH₂ + R₂NH + R₃N + R₄N⁺X⁻ (mixture of amines). Excess NH₃ favours 1°.
  • Gabriel phthalimide synthesis: Phthalimide + KOH → potassium phthalimide + RX → N-alkylphthalimide → R-NH₂ (hydrolysis). Gives pure 1° amine only.
  • Reduction of nitro compounds: R-NO₂ + 6[H] → R-NH₂ + 2H₂O. For aniline: C₆H₅NO₂ + Sn/HCl → C₆H₅NH₂.
  • Reduction of nitriles: R-CN + 4[H] (LiAlH₄ or Na/EtOH) → R-CH₂-NH₂.
  • Hofmann bromamide degradation: RCONH₂ + Br₂ + 4NaOH → R-NH₂ + Na₂CO₃ + 2NaBr + 2H₂O. Product has one less carbon.

Basicity of Amines

Amines are basic due to the lone pair on nitrogen.

In gas phase: 3° > 2° > 1° > NH₃ (inductive effect of alkyl groups dominates).

In aqueous solution: 2° > 1° > 3° > NH₃ (for small alkyl groups; solvation and steric effects compete with inductive effect).

Aromatic amines: Much weaker bases than aliphatic amines due to resonance delocalisation of lone pair into the ring.

Basicity order: (C₂H₅)₂NH > C₂H₅NH₂ > NH₃ > C₆H₅NH₂ > C₆H₅NHC₆H₅.

Effect of substituents on aniline: EDG (electron-donating, -CH₃, -OCH₃) increase basicity. EWG (electron-withdrawing, -NO₂, -CN) decrease basicity. p-nitroaniline is much less basic than aniline.

Chemical Reactions

Acylation: RNH₂ + CH₃COCl → RNHCOCH₃ + HCl (amide formation). 3° amines cannot be acylated.

Carbylamine (isocyanide) reaction: R-NH₂ + CHCl₃ + 3KOH → R-NC + 3KCl + 3H₂O. Foul smell of isocyanide. Test for 1° amines only.

Hinsberg's test: Distinguishes 1°, 2°, 3° amines using benzenesulphonyl chloride (C₆H₅SO₂Cl).

  • 1°: Soluble in NaOH (sulphonamide with acidic H).
  • 2°: Insoluble in NaOH (no acidic H).
  • 3°: No reaction.

Diazotisation and Reactions of Diazonium Salts

Diazotisation: ArNH₂ + NaNO₂ + 2HCl → ArN₂⁺Cl⁻ + NaCl + 2H₂O (at 0-5°C).

Diazonium salt reactions (ArN₂⁺):

  • Sandmeyer: ArN₂⁺ + CuCl → ArCl; + CuBr → ArBr; + CuCN → ArCN.
  • Gattermann: ArN₂⁺ + Cu/HCl → ArCl (without Cu salt).
  • Schiemann: ArN₂⁺ + HBF₄ → ArF + N₂ + BF₃.
  • Replacement by -OH: ArN₂⁺ + H₂O (warm) → ArOH + N₂.
  • Replacement by -H: ArN₂⁺ + H₃PO₂ → ArH + N₂.
  • Coupling reaction: ArN₂⁺ + ArOH → Ar-N=N-Ar'OH (azo dye). ArN₂⁺ + ArNH₂ → Ar-N=N-Ar'NH₂. Used in dye manufacture.

Distinction Tests

  • Carbylamine test: only 1° amines (foul smell).
  • Hinsberg test: distinguishes all three.
  • Nitrous acid (HNO₂) test: 1° aliphatic → N₂ gas + alcohol; 1° aromatic → diazonium salt (0-5°C); 2° → N-nitrosoamine (yellow oily liquid); 3° aliphatic → no visible reaction; 3° aromatic → p-nitrosoamine.

Summary

Amines are nitrogen-containing organic bases classified as 1°, 2°, or 3°. They are prepared by alkylation, reduction of nitro compounds, or Gabriel synthesis. Basicity depends on electronic effects, solvation, and steric factors. Important reactions include acylation, carbylamine reaction (1° test), and Hinsberg test. Aromatic amines form diazonium salts at 0-5°C, which are versatile intermediates for Sandmeyer reactions and azo dye synthesis.

Important Terms

  • Diazotisation: Formation of diazonium salt from aromatic amine
  • Sandmeyer Reaction: Replacement of N₂⁺ by Cl/Br/CN using Cu salts
  • Coupling Reaction: Diazonium salt + phenol/amine → azo compound (dye)
  • Carbylamine Reaction: Test for primary amines (foul-smelling isocyanide)
  • Gabriel Synthesis: Preparation of pure primary amines
  • Hofmann Degradation: RCONH₂ → RNH₂ (one carbon less)

Quick Revision

  • Basicity (aqueous): 2° > 1° > 3° > NH₃ >> ArNH₂
  • Gabriel synthesis: only 1° amines (not ArNH₂)
  • Hofmann degradation: RCONH₂ + Br₂/NaOH → RNH₂ (one C less)
  • Carbylamine: 1° only; Hinsberg: distinguishes all three
  • Diazotisation at 0-5°C; Sandmeyer: CuX for ArX
  • Coupling with phenol: azo dye (coloured compound)