Chemical Reactions of Amines 🎯

Amines love to react because their nitrogen atom carries a lone-pair, making them eager nucleophiles. The N–H bond is also quite polar, and primary amines form strong H-bonds, so their boiling points rise compared with similar alkanes 🌡️:contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0}.


1  Basic character 🚩

Amines grab protons from acids and give you ammonium salts:

$$\mathrm{RNH_2 + H^+ \;\longrightarrow\; RNH_3^{+}}$$

You can measure strength with $$K_b=\frac{[\mathrm{RNH_3^{+}}][\mathrm{OH^-}]}{[\mathrm{RNH_2}]}$$  and $$pK_b=-\log K_b$$. A bigger Kb (or smaller pKb) means a stronger base 💪:contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}.

  • Gas phase order: tertiary > secondary > primary > NH3.
  • Water order: primary > secondary > tertiary (solvation + steric effects flip the trend).
  • Aromatic amines (e.g., aniline) are weaker because resonance pulls the lone pair into the ring:contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}.

2  Alkylation ⚡

Slip an alkyl halide into the mix and you lengthen the carbon chain:

$$\mathrm{RNH_2 + R’X \;\xrightarrow[\;]{\;KOH\;}\; RR’NH + HX}$$

Keep going with excess halide to reach quaternary ammonium salt (handy surfactants):contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}.


3  Acylation (including Benzoylation) 🧥

Primary or secondary amines trade one hydrogen for an acyl group when they meet acyl chlorides, anhydrides, or esters (pyridine mops up HCl):

$$\mathrm{CH_3NH_2 + C_6H_5COCl \;\longrightarrow\; CH_3NHCOC_6H_5 + HCl}$$

The product is an amide. Using benzoyl chloride gives benzoylation:contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}.


4  Carbylamine (Isocyanide) test 😷

Heat a primary amine with CHCl3 and ethanolic KOH:

$$\mathrm{RNH_2 + CHCl_3 + 3KOH \;\xrightarrow{\Delta}\; RNC + 3KCl + 3H_2O}$$

The nasty-smelling isocyanide proves you started with a primary amine:contentReference[oaicite:5]{index=5}.


5  Reaction with nitrous acid 🌬️

  • Primary aliphatic amine → unstable alkyldiazonium salt → N2 (vigorous fizz) + alcohol (quantitative N2 lets chemists measure amino acids):contentReference[oaicite:6]{index=6}.
  • Primary aromatic amine (273–278 K) → stable arenediazonium salt (gateway to dyes and more).
    e.g. Aniline + HNO2 + HCl → C6H5N2Cl + 2 H2O:contentReference[oaicite:7]{index=7}.
  • Secondary and tertiary amines behave differently (no N2 burst).

6  Hinsberg test with benzenesulphonyl chloride 🧪

Amines meet C6H5SO2ClProductAlkali solubility?
PrimaryN-ethylbenzenesulphonyl amideYes (acidic H)
SecondaryN,N-diethylbenzenesulphonamideNo
TertiaryNo reactionNo product

This elegant test separates and identifies the three classes of amines:contentReference[oaicite:8]{index=8}.


7  Electrophilic substitution on aniline 🎨

The –NH2 group pumps electrons into the ring, so ortho/para positions light up with charge density:

  • Bromination: Br2(aq) instantly gives 2,4,6-tribromoaniline (white precipitate):contentReference[oaicite:9]{index=9}.
  • Nitration: Direct nitration is messy, so first protect –NH2 by acetylation (make acetanilide), nitrate, then hydrolyse to get mostly p-nitroaniline:contentReference[oaicite:10]{index=10}.
  • Sulphonation: Aniline → anilinium hydrogensulphate → heat → sulphanilic acid (p-aminobenzenesulphonic acid):contentReference[oaicite:11]{index=11}.

Because AlCl3 forms a salt with aniline, Friedel–Crafts alkylation/acylation simply doesn’t happen.


8  A quick look at diazonium salts ❄️

Arenediazonium ions (R–N2+X) stay stable only around 273 K; they form by diazotisation of a primary aromatic amine with NaNO2 + HCl. These salts unlock gorgeous azo-dyes and coupling reactions :contentReference[oaicite:12]{index=12}.


High-Yield NEET Ideas 🔥

  1. Understand pKb trends—gas vs. aqueous—plus factors like solvation and steric hindrance.
  2. Use the carbylamine test to spot primary amines instantly.
  3. Remember the Hinsberg test for separating primary, secondary, and tertiary amines.
  4. Master diazotisation conditions (273 K, NaNO2/HCl) because diazonium ions appear in many synthesis questions.
  5. Know why the –NH2 group sends electrophiles to ortho/para positions and how acetyl protection tames its hyperreactivity.

Happy studying and keep practicing those reaction pathways! 🎓✨