Amines
Karnataka Board · Class 12 · Chemistry
NCERT Solutions for Amines — Karnataka Board Class 12 Chemistry.
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9.1Classify the following amines as primary, secondary or tertiary:
(i) (CH₃)₂CHNH₂ [structure from image]
(ii) Structure from image
(iii) (C₂H₅)₂CHNH₂
(iv) (C₂H₅)₂NHShow solution
- Primary (1°): one H replaced → R–NH₂
- Secondary (2°): two H replaced → R₂NH
- Tertiary (3°): three H replaced → R₃N
(i) The structure shown in the image is that of a cyclic secondary amine (cyclohexylamine type) or an N-substituted compound. Based on standard NCERT context, image (i) represents a compound where nitrogen bears two carbon substituents and one H → Secondary amine.
(ii) The structure shown in image (ii) represents a compound where nitrogen bears three carbon substituents and no H → Tertiary amine.
(iii)
The nitrogen atom is bonded to two H atoms and one carbon group (the group). Since only one H of NH₃ is replaced by an alkyl group, this is a Primary amine (1°).
(iv)
The nitrogen atom is bonded to two ethyl groups and one H atom. Two H atoms of NH₃ are replaced → Secondary amine (2°).
9.2(i) Write structures of different isomeric amines corresponding to the molecular formula C₄H₁₁N.
(ii) Write IUPAC names of all the isomers.
(iii) What type of isomerism is exhibited by different pairs of amines?
(Note: The molecular formula given in the OCR appears as C₂H₁₁N but the correct formula for amines with multiple isomers is C₄H₁₁N, which is the standard NCERT question.)Show solution
Degree of unsaturation , so all isomers are saturated amines.
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(i) Structures of all isomeric amines:
Primary amines (R–NH₂):
1. — Butan-1-amine
2. — Butan-2-amine
3. — 2-Methylpropan-1-amine
4. — 2-Methylpropan-2-amine
Secondary amines (R₂NH):
5. — N-Methylpropan-1-amine
6. — N-Methylpropan-2-amine
7. — N-Ethylethanamine (Diethylamine)
Tertiary amines (R₃N):
8. — N,N-Dimethylethanamine
9. — Wait, has formula , not .
Correct: — N,N-Dimethylethanamine ✓
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(ii) IUPAC names:
| S.No. | Structure | IUPAC Name |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | | Butan-1-amine |
| 2 | | Butan-2-amine |
| 3 | | 2-Methylpropan-1-amine |
| 4 | | 2-Methylpropan-2-amine |
| 5 | | N-Methylpropan-1-amine |
| 6 | | N-Methylpropan-2-amine |
| 7 | | N-Ethylethanamine |
| 8 | | N,N-Dimethylethanamine |
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(iii) Types of isomerism:
- Chain isomerism: Isomers 1 and 3 (different carbon skeletons, both primary amines). E.g., butan-1-amine and 2-methylpropan-1-amine.
- Position isomerism: Isomers 1 and 2 (same chain, at different positions). E.g., butan-1-amine and butan-2-amine.
- Metamerism: Isomers among secondary amines having different alkyl groups on either side of nitrogen. E.g., N-methylpropan-1-amine and N-ethylethanamine.
- Functional isomerism: Primary, secondary and tertiary amines with the same molecular formula are functional isomers of each other.
9.3How will you convert:
(i) Benzene into aniline
(ii) Benzene into N,N-dimethylaniline
(iii) Cl–(CH₂)₄–Cl into hexan-1,6-diamine?Show solution
Step 1: Nitration of benzene to give nitrobenzene.
Step 2: Reduction of nitrobenzene to aniline.
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(ii) Benzene → N,N-Dimethylaniline:
Step 1: Benzene → Nitrobenzene (as above)
Step 2: Nitrobenzene → Aniline (reduction as above)
Step 3: Aniline is treated with excess methyl iodide (CH₃I) in the presence of :
(N,N-Dimethylaniline)
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(iii) Cl–(CH₂)₄–Cl → Hexan-1,6-diamine:
1,4-Dichlorobutane is treated with excess ethanolic ammonia in a sealed tube:
However, to get hexan-1,6-diamine (6 carbons) from 1,4-dichlorobutane (4 carbons), the correct route is via nitrile:
Step 1: React with NaCN:
(Hexanedinitrile)
Step 2: Reduce with /Ni or :
(Hexan-1,6-diamine)
Final Answer: (Hexan-1,6-diamine)
9.4Arrange the following in increasing order of their basic strength:
(i) C₂H₅NH₂, C₆H₅NH₂, NH₃, C₆H₅CH₂NH₂ and (C₂H₅)₂NH
(ii) C₂H₅NH₂, (C₂H₅)₂NH, (C₂H₅)₃N, C₆H₅NH₂
(iii) CH₃NH₂, (CH₃)₂NH, (CH₃)₃N, C₆H₅NH₂, C₆H₅CH₂NH₂Show solution
- Alkyl groups (electron-donating) increase basic strength.
- Aryl groups (electron-withdrawing by resonance) decrease basic strength.
- In aqueous solution, secondary alkylamines are stronger bases than primary, which are stronger than tertiary (due to solvation effects).
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(i)
- : lone pair delocalised into ring → weakest base.
- : no alkyl group.
- : benzyl group is electron-withdrawing by induction but not directly on ring, so stronger than .
- : alkyl group donates electrons → stronger than .
- : two alkyl groups → strongest.
\boxed{C_6H_5NH_2 < NH_3 < C_6H_5CH_2NH_2 < C_2H_5NH_2 < (C_2H_5)_2NH}
---
(ii)
In aqueous solution:
- : weakest (resonance withdrawal).
- : tertiary, less solvated → weaker than secondary.
- : primary.
- : secondary, best combination of induction and solvation → strongest.
\boxed{C_6H_5NH_2 < C_2H_5NH_2 < (C_2H_5)_3N < (C_2H_5)_2NH}
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(iii)
- : weakest (lone pair in resonance with ring).
- : not on ring, slightly stronger than aniline but weaker than alkylamines.
- : tertiary, less solvated.
- : primary.
- : secondary → strongest.
\boxed{C_6H_5NH_2 < C_6H_5CH_2NH_2 < (CH_3)_3N < CH_3NH_2 < (CH_3)_2NH}
9.5Complete the following acid-base reactions and name the products:
(i) CH₃CH₂CH₂NH₂ + HCl →
(ii) (C₂H₅)₂NH + HCl →Show solution
(i)
Product: Propan-1-aminium chloride (or propylammonium chloride)
(ii)
Product: N-Ethylethanaminium chloride (or diethylammonium chloride)
9.6Write reactions of the final alkylation product of aniline with excess of methyl iodide in the presence of sodium carbonate solution.Show solution
The final alkylation product is trimethylphenylammonium iodide:
Reaction of the final product:
Trimethylphenylammonium iodide is a quaternary ammonium salt. It does not react further with alkyl halides. However, it can react with to give trimethylphenylammonium hydroxide:
The quaternary ammonium hydroxide is a strong base and can undergo Hofmann elimination on heating:
Note: The key point is that the final product (trimethylphenylammonium iodide) is a quaternary ammonium salt with no further N-alkylation possible.
9.7Write chemical reaction of aniline with benzoyl chloride and write the name of the product obtained.Show solution
Product: -Phenylbenzamide (benzanilide)
The HCl produced is neutralised if the reaction is carried out in the presence of a base like pyridine or NaOH.
9.8Write structures of different isomers corresponding to the molecular formula C₃H₉N. Write IUPAC names of the isomers which will liberate nitrogen gas on treatment with nitrous acid.Show solution
Degree of unsaturation , so all are saturated amines.
All isomers:
Primary amines:
1. — Propan-1-amine
2. — Propan-2-amine
Secondary amine:
3. — N-Methylethanamine
Tertiary amine:
4. — N,N-Dimethylmethanamine (Trimethylamine)
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Reaction with nitrous acid ():
- Primary aliphatic amines react with to liberate gas:
- Secondary amines form N-nitrosamines (yellow oily liquid, no gas).
- Tertiary amines form ammonium salts (no gas).
Isomers that liberate gas (primary amines):
1. Propan-1-amine —
2. Propan-2-amine —
9.9Convert:
(i) 3-Methylaniline into 3-nitrotoluene.
(ii) Aniline into 1,3,5-tribromobenzene.Show solution
3-Methylaniline is -toluidine:
Step 1: Protect the group by acetylation (to prevent oxidation during nitration):
Step 2: Diazotisation — convert to diazonium salt:
Step 3: Replace with using Sandmeyer-type reaction (treat with / , catalyst) — but the standard route is:
Actually, the correct approach:
Step 1: Diazotise 3-methylaniline:
Step 2: Treat with then heat (Balz-Schiemann) — not for nitro.
Correct standard method:
Step 1: Acetylate :
Step 2: Nitrate (the acetamido group directs ortho/para; since position 3 has , nitration occurs at position 4 relative to , i.e., position 4 of the ring).
Simpler NCERT approach:
Step 1: Diazotise:
Step 2: Replace with using (Sandmeyer reaction with ):
Product: 3-Nitrotoluene ✓
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(ii) Aniline → 1,3,5-Tribromobenzene:
Direct bromination of aniline gives 2,4,6-tribromoaniline. To get 1,3,5-tribromobenzene, the group must be removed after bromination.
Step 1: Bromination of aniline with excess :
(2,4,6-Tribromoaniline)
Step 2: Diazotisation of 2,4,6-tribromoaniline:
Step 3: Reductive removal of diazonium group using :
Product: 1,3,5-Tribromobenzene ✓
Exercises
9.1Write IUPAC names of the following compounds and classify them into primary, secondary and tertiary amines.
(i) (CH₃)₂CHNH₂
(ii) CH₃(CH₂)₂NH₂
(iii) CH₃NHCH(CH₃)₂
(iv) (CH₃)₃CNH₂
(v) C₆H₅NHCH₃
(vi) (CH₃CH₂)₂NCH₃
(vii) m-BrC₆H₄NH₂Show solution
(i)
- Parent chain: propane (3 carbons including the CH)
- on C-2
- IUPAC Name: Propan-2-amine
- Classification: Primary amine (1°) — attached to one carbon
(ii)
- Parent chain: propane, on C-1
- IUPAC Name: Propan-1-amine
- Classification: Primary amine (1°)
(iii)
- Nitrogen has two different groups: methyl and isopropyl
- Larger group: propan-2-yl (isopropyl) → parent: propan-2-amine
- Smaller group on N: methyl → N-methyl
- IUPAC Name: N-Methylpropan-2-amine
- Classification: Secondary amine (2°)
(iv)
- Parent chain: 2-methylpropane; on C-2
- IUPAC Name: 2-Methylpropan-2-amine
- Classification: Primary amine (1°)
(v)
- Parent: benzenamine (aniline); N-methyl substituent
- IUPAC Name: N-Methylaniline (or N-Methylbenzenamine)
- Classification: Secondary amine (2°)
(vi)
- Nitrogen has two ethyl groups and one methyl group
- Largest group: ethanamine as parent
- IUPAC Name: N-Ethyl-N-methylethanamine
- Classification: Tertiary amine (3°)
(vii)
- Bromine at meta position of aniline
- IUPAC Name: 3-Bromoaniline (or 3-Bromobenzenamine)
- Classification: Primary amine (1°)
9.2Give one chemical test to distinguish between the following pairs of compounds.
(i) Methylamine and dimethylamine
(ii) Secondary and tertiary amines
(iii) Ethylamine and aniline
(iv) Aniline and benzylamine
(v) Aniline and N-methylanilineShow solution
Test — Hinsberg's test (using benzenesulphonyl chloride, ):
- (primary amine) reacts with to give a sulphonamide soluble in alkali (NaOH).
- (secondary amine) reacts to give a sulphonamide insoluble in alkali.
Alternatively — Carbylamine test:
- (primary amine) gives isocyanide (foul smell) with /alc. KOH.
- (secondary amine) does not give carbylamine test.
(Foul-smelling isocyanide)
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(ii) Secondary and Tertiary amines:
Test — Hinsberg's test:
- Secondary amine reacts with to give a sulphonamide insoluble in NaOH.
- Tertiary amine does not react with (no reaction or forms a soluble salt).
Alternatively — Nitrous acid test:
- Secondary amine + → N-nitrosamine (yellow oily liquid).
- Tertiary amine + → forms a salt (no yellow precipitate).
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(iii) Ethylamine () and Aniline ():
Test — Azo dye test (diazonium coupling):
- Aniline (aromatic primary amine) undergoes diazotisation with at 273–278 K to form a diazonium salt, which couples with -naphthol to give an orange-red azo dye.
- Ethylamine (aliphatic primary amine) forms an unstable diazonium salt that immediately decomposes to give gas and alcohol; no azo dye is formed.
Alternatively: Aniline does not give carbylamine test (wait — aniline does give carbylamine test as it is a primary amine). Better test: Aniline gives orange precipitate with water (2,4,6-tribromoaniline), while ethylamine does not give a precipitate.
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(iv) Aniline () and Benzylamine ():
Test — Azo dye test:
- Aniline (aromatic primary amine) forms a stable diazonium salt at 273–278 K, which couples with -naphthol to give an orange-red azo dye.
- Benzylamine (aliphatic primary amine) forms an unstable diazonium salt that decomposes immediately; no azo dye formed.
Alternatively — Reaction with :
- Aniline gives a characteristic colour with .
- Benzylamine does not.
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(v) Aniline () and N-Methylaniline ():
Test — Carbylamine test:
- Aniline (primary amine) reacts with and alc. KOH to give phenyl isocyanide (foul smell).
- N-Methylaniline (secondary amine) does not give carbylamine test.
Alternatively — Hinsberg's test:
- Aniline gives sulphonamide soluble in NaOH.
- N-Methylaniline gives sulphonamide insoluble in NaOH.
9.3Account for the following:
(i) pKb of aniline is more than that of methylamine.
(ii) Ethylamine is soluble in water whereas aniline is not.
(iii) Methylamine in water reacts with ferric chloride to precipitate hydrated ferric oxide.
(iv) Although amino group is o- and p-directing in aromatic electrophilic substitution reactions, aniline on nitration gives a substantial amount of m-nitroaniline.
(v) Aniline does not undergo Friedel-Crafts reaction.
(vi) Diazonium salts of aromatic amines are more stable than those of aliphatic amines.
(vii) Gabriel phthalimide synthesis is preferred for synthesising primary amines.Show solution
In aniline, the lone pair of electrons on the nitrogen atom is in conjugation with the -electron system of the benzene ring. This delocalisation reduces the availability of the lone pair for protonation, making aniline a weaker base.
In methylamine, the methyl group is electron-donating (+I effect), which increases the electron density on nitrogen, making the lone pair more available for protonation. Hence methylamine is a stronger base.
Higher means weaker base, so (aniline) > (methylamine).
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(ii) Ethylamine is soluble in water but aniline is not:
Ethylamine can form hydrogen bonds with water molecules due to the presence of group. The ethyl group is small, so the hydrophobic part does not significantly hinder dissolution.
Aniline also has group but the large hydrophobic benzene ring makes it predominantly non-polar. The hydrophobic interaction of the benzene ring with water outweighs the hydrogen bonding of with water, making aniline sparingly soluble in water.
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(iii) Methylamine precipitates hydrated ferric oxide from FeCl₃ solution:
Methylamine is a stronger base than water. In aqueous solution, it produces ions:
The ions react with to precipitate hydrated ferric oxide (reddish-brown precipitate):
(or , hydrated ferric oxide)
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(iv) Aniline gives substantial m-nitroaniline on nitration:
Nitration is carried out with conc. /conc. (a strongly acidic medium). In this medium, aniline gets protonated to form anilinium ion ().
The anilinium ion has group which is an electron-withdrawing group (−I and −M effect) and is a meta-director. Hence, nitration of the protonated aniline gives a substantial amount of m-nitroaniline.
(Some unprotonated aniline also undergoes nitration at o/p positions, giving o- and p-nitroaniline.)
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(v) Aniline does not undergo Friedel-Crafts reaction:
Friedel-Crafts reaction requires a Lewis acid catalyst like . Aniline is a Lewis base; it donates its lone pair to to form a complex:
This complex formation deactivates the catalyst. Also, the group becomes , which is an electron-withdrawing group and deactivates the ring. Hence, Friedel-Crafts reaction does not occur with aniline.
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(vi) Diazonium salts of aromatic amines are more stable than those of aliphatic amines:
In arenediazonium salts (), the positive charge on nitrogen is stabilised by resonance with the -electron system of the benzene ring. The group is in conjugation with the ring, distributing the positive charge.
In alkyldiazonium salts (), no such resonance stabilisation is possible. Hence, they are highly unstable and decompose immediately to give gas and carbocation.
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(vii) Gabriel phthalimide synthesis is preferred for synthesising primary amines:
Gabriel phthalimide synthesis involves the reaction of phthalimide (potassium salt) with an alkyl halide, followed by hydrolysis. This method gives exclusively primary amines because:
- The nitrogen in phthalimide has only one replaceable H (actually none — it is the K salt).
- Only one alkyl group can be introduced on nitrogen.
- Hydrolysis of the N-alkyl phthalimide gives the primary amine.
This avoids the formation of secondary and tertiary amines and quaternary ammonium salts, which are common side products in ammonolysis of alkyl halides. Hence, Gabriel synthesis gives pure primary amines.
9.4Arrange the following:
(i) In decreasing order of pKb values: C₂H₅NH₂, C₆H₅NHCH₃, (C₂H₅)₂NH and C₆H₅NH₂
(ii) In increasing order of basic strength: C₆H₅NH₂, C₆H₅N(CH₃)₂, (C₂H₅)₂NH and CH₃NH₂
(iii) In increasing order of basic strength:
(a) Aniline, p-nitroaniline and p-toluidine
(b) C₆H₅NH₂, C₆H₅NHCH₃, C₆H₅CH₂NH₂
(iv) In decreasing order of basic strength in gas phase: C₂H₅NH₂, (C₂H₅)₂NH, (C₂H₅)₃N and NH₃
(v) In increasing order of boiling point: C₂H₅OH, (CH₃)₂NH, C₂H₅NH₂
(vi) In increasing order of solubility in water: C₆H₅NH₂, (C₂H₅)₂NH, C₂H₅NH₂Show solution
Higher = weaker base.
- : lone pair delocalised into ring → weakest base → highest ()
- : N-methyl group slightly increases electron density but ring still withdraws → weak base ()
- : alkyl group, primary amine ()
- : two alkyl groups, secondary amine → strongest base → lowest ()
\boxed{C_6H_5NH_2 > C_6H_5NHCH_3 > C_2H_5NH_2 > (C_2H_5)_2NH}
(Decreasing order of )
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(ii) Increasing order of basic strength:
- : weakest (resonance withdrawal)
- : primary alkylamine
- : N,N-dimethylaniline — two methyl groups increase electron density on N, but ring still withdraws; stronger than aniline but weaker than aliphatic amines
- : strongest (two ethyl groups + solvation)
\boxed{C_6H_5NH_2 < C_6H_5N(CH_3)_2 < CH_3NH_2 < (C_2H_5)_2NH}
---
(iii)(a) Aniline, p-nitroaniline, p-toluidine — increasing basic strength:
- -Nitroaniline: is strongly electron-withdrawing (−M and −I), further reduces lone pair availability → weakest base.
- Aniline: lone pair in resonance with ring.
- -Toluidine: is electron-donating (+I), increases electron density on ring and on N → strongest base among the three.
\boxed{p\text{-Nitroaniline} < \text{Aniline} < p\text{-Toluidine}}
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(iii)(b) — increasing basic strength:
- : lone pair delocalised into ring → weakest.
- : N-methyl group donates electrons to N, but ring still withdraws; slightly stronger than aniline.
- : is not directly on ring; benzyl group has mild −I effect but no resonance withdrawal of lone pair; behaves more like aliphatic amine → strongest.
\boxed{C_6H_5NH_2 < C_6H_5NHCH_3 < C_6H_5CH_2NH_2}
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(iv) Decreasing order of basic strength in gas phase:
In gas phase, there is no solvation effect. Basic strength depends purely on electron-donating ability of alkyl groups (inductive effect).
More alkyl groups → more electron donation → stronger base.
\boxed{(C_2H_5)_3N > (C_2H_5)_2NH > C_2H_5NH_2 > NH_3}
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(v) Increasing order of boiling point:
Factors: molecular mass, hydrogen bonding.
- : secondary amine, one N–H bond, weak H-bonding, MW = 45.
- : primary amine, two N–H bonds, stronger H-bonding than secondary, MW = 45.
- : alcohol, O–H bond, strongest H-bonding (O more electronegative than N), MW = 46.
Boiling points: (7°C) < (17°C) < (78°C)
\boxed{(CH_3)_2NH < C_2H_5NH_2 < C_2H_5OH}
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(vi) Increasing order of solubility in water:
- (aniline): large hydrophobic benzene ring → least soluble.
- : two ethyl groups, larger hydrophobic part than , only one N–H for H-bonding → less soluble.
- : smaller molecule, two N–H bonds for H-bonding → most soluble.
\boxed{C_6H_5NH_2 < (C_2H_5)_2NH < C_2H_5NH_2}
9.5How will you convert:
(i) Ethanoic acid into methanamine
(ii) Hexanenitrile into 1-aminopentane
(iii) Methanol to ethanoic acid
(iv) Ethanamine into methanamine
(v) Ethanoic acid into propanoic acid
(vi) Methanamine into ethanamine
(vii) Nitromethane into dimethylamine
(viii) Propanoic acid into ethanoic acidShow solution
Ethanoic acid () → Ethanamide () → Methanamine () via Hofmann bromamide reaction.
Hofmann bromamide reaction reduces the carbon chain by one.
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(ii) Hexanenitrile → 1-Aminopentane ():
Hexanenitrile: (6 carbons including CN)
Partial hydrolysis of hexanenitrile gives pentanamide, then Hofmann reaction gives 1-aminopentane.
OR — Direct reduction:
This gives 1-aminohexane (6 carbons), not 1-aminopentane.
Correct route: Hexanenitrile has 6 carbons. 1-Aminopentane has 5 carbons. So:
(Hexanamide → 1-Aminopentane via Hofmann degradation)
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(iii) Methanol → Ethanoic acid:
Better route:
Step 1:
Step 2:
Step 3:
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(iv) Ethanamine → Methanamine:
Ethanamine: (2 carbons) → Methanamine: (1 carbon)
Actually, the Hofmann reaction on an amide derived from ethanamine doesn't directly give methanamine.
Correct route:
Step 1: Oxidise ethanamine to ethanoic acid:
Step 2:
Step 3:
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(v) Ethanoic acid → Propanoic acid:
Ethanoic acid (, 2C) → Propanoic acid (, 3C)
Better route:
Simplest route:
Standard NCERT route:
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(vi) Methanamine → Ethanamine:
Methanamine (, 1C) → Ethanamine (, 2C)
Step 1:
Step 2:
Step 3:
Step 4:
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(vii) Nitromethane → Dimethylamine:
Nitromethane () → Methanamine () → Dimethylamine ()
Step 1: Reduce nitromethane:
Step 2: React methanamine with excess (controlled) or via reductive amination:
(Control the amount of to get secondary amine)
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(viii) Propanoic acid → Ethanoic acid:
Propanoic acid (, 3C) → Ethanoic acid (, 2C)
Step 1: Propanoic acid → Propanamide ()
Step 2: Propanamide → Ethanamine (Hofmann bromamide reaction)
Step 3: Ethanamine → Ethanol ()
Step 4: Ethanol → Ethanoic acid (oxidation with )
9.6Describe a method for the identification of primary, secondary and tertiary amines. Also write chemical equations of the reactions involved.Show solution
Hinsberg's reagent is benzenesulphonyl chloride ().
The amine is treated with Hinsberg's reagent in the presence of aqueous KOH.
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Primary amine ():
Reacts with to form a sulphonamide which is soluble in KOH (due to acidic N–H).
The product dissolves in KOH → Primary amine confirmed.
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Secondary amine ():
Reacts with to form a sulphonamide which is insoluble in KOH (no acidic N–H).
The product is insoluble in KOH → Secondary amine confirmed.
---
Tertiary amine ():
Does not react with (no N–H bond). The amine layer separates out.
No sulphonamide formed → Tertiary amine confirmed.
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Summary Table:
| Amine | Reaction with /KOH | Observation |
|---|---|---|
| Primary | Forms sulphonamide soluble in KOH | Clear solution |
| Secondary | Forms sulphonamide insoluble in KOH | Precipitate |
| Tertiary | No reaction | Amine layer separates |
9.7Write short notes on the following:
(i) Carbylamine reaction
(ii) Diazotisation
(iii) Hofmann's bromamide reaction
(iv) Coupling reaction
(v) Ammonolysis
(vi) Acetylation
(vii) Gabriel phthalimide synthesisShow solution
Primary amines (aliphatic or aromatic) react with chloroform () and alcoholic KOH to form isocyanides (carbylamines), which have a very foul smell. This reaction is used as a test for primary amines.
Example:
Secondary and tertiary amines do not give this test.
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(ii) Diazotisation:
The conversion of a primary aromatic amine into a diazonium salt by treatment with nitrous acid () at 273–278 K is called diazotisation.
The diazonium salt is unstable and must be used immediately. It is stabilised by resonance in aromatic systems.
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(iii) Hofmann's Bromamide Reaction (Hofmann Degradation):
When a primary amide is treated with bromine and aqueous/ethanolic KOH, it gives a primary amine with one carbon less than the amide. This reaction involves migration of an alkyl or aryl group from carbonyl carbon to nitrogen.
Example:
This is useful for preparing primary amines with one carbon less than the starting amide.
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(iv) Coupling Reaction:
Arenediazonium salts react with activated aromatic compounds (phenols or aromatic amines) in weakly alkaline or acidic medium to form brightly coloured azo compounds (). This reaction is called coupling reaction.
(p-Hydroxyazobenzene — orange dye)
Coupling occurs at the para position of phenol/amine. Azo dyes are used in the textile industry.
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(v) Ammonolysis:
The cleavage of the C–X bond of an alkyl halide by ammonia is called ammonolysis. The alkyl halide reacts with excess ethanolic ammonia in a sealed tube at 373 K.
The primary amine formed can further react:
A mixture of primary, secondary, tertiary amines and quaternary ammonium salt is obtained. Excess of ammonia favours primary amine formation.
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(vi) Acetylation:
Reaction of amines with acyl chlorides or acid anhydrides to form amides is called acetylation (acylation).
Example with aniline:
(Acetanilide)
Acetylation is used to protect the group during reactions and to reduce the activating effect of in electrophilic substitution.
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(vii) Gabriel Phthalimide Synthesis:
This is a method for the preparation of pure primary amines. Phthalimide is treated with KOH to form potassium phthalimide, which then reacts with an alkyl halide. The N-alkyl phthalimide formed is hydrolysed with aqueous NaOH or to give the primary amine.
This method gives exclusively primary amines and avoids secondary/tertiary amine formation. It cannot be used for aromatic primary amines because aryl halides do not undergo nucleophilic substitution easily.
9.8Accomplish the following conversions:
(i) Nitrobenzene to benzoic acid
(ii) Benzene to m-bromophenol
(iii) Benzoic acid to aniline
(iv) Aniline to 2,4,6-tribromofluorobenzene
(v) Benzyl chloride to 2-phenylethanamine
(vi) Chlorobenzene to p-chloroaniline
(vii) Aniline to p-bromoaniline
(viii) Benzamide to toluene
(ix) Aniline to benzyl alcoholShow solution
Step 1: Reduction of nitrobenzene to aniline.
Step 2: Diazotisation.
Step 3: Sandmeyer reaction with CuCN to give benzonitrile.
Step 4: Hydrolysis of benzonitrile to benzoic acid.
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(ii) Benzene → m-Bromophenol:
But this gives phenol, not m-bromophenol. Correct route:
Correct route for m-bromophenol:
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(iii) Benzoic acid → Aniline:
Step 1: Benzoic acid reacts with ammonia on heating to give benzamide.
Step 2: Hofmann bromamide reaction converts benzamide to aniline.
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(iv) Aniline → 2,4,6-Tribromofluorobenzene:
Step 1: Bromination of aniline to give 2,4,6-tribromoaniline.
Step 2: Diazotisation.
Step 3: Balz-Schiemann reaction (treat with , then heat) to replace with .
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(v) Benzyl chloride → 2-Phenylethanamine ():
Step 1: Benzyl chloride reacts with KCN to give phenylacetonitrile.
Step 2: Reduction of nitrile with gives 2-phenylethanamine.
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(vi) Chlorobenzene → p-Chloroaniline:
Step 1: Nitration of chlorobenzene (Cl is o/p director) gives a mixture of o- and p-nitrochlorobenzene.
Step 2: Separate p-nitrochlorobenzene.
Step 3: Reduce with Fe/HCl to give p-chloroaniline.
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(vii) Aniline → p-Bromoaniline:
Direct bromination of aniline gives 2,4,6-tribromoaniline. To get p-bromoaniline:
Step 1: Acetylation of aniline to acetanilide (reduces activating effect, prevents polybromination).
Step 2: Bromination gives predominantly p-bromoacetanilide.
Step 3: Hydrolysis of amide gives p-bromoaniline.
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(viii) Benzamide → Toluene:
This gives benzene, not toluene. Correct route:
Step 1: Reduce benzamide with to give benzylamine.
Step 2: Diazotise benzylamine.
Step 3: Reductive deamination with gives toluene.
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(ix) Aniline → Benzyl alcohol ():
This gives benzylamine. For benzyl alcohol:
Step 1: Diazotisation of aniline.
Step 2: Sandmeyer reaction with CuCN → benzonitrile.
Step 3: Hydrolysis → benzoic acid.
Step 4: Reduction with → benzyl alcohol.
9.9Give the structures of A, B and C in the following reactions:
(i) CH₃CH₂I → (NaCN) → A → (OH⁻, partial hydrolysis) → B → (Ph₂) → C
(ii) C₆H₅N₂Cl → (CuCN) → A → (H₂O/H⁺) → B → (NH₃) → C
(iii) CH₃CH₂Br → (KCN) → A → (LiAlH₄) → B → (HNO₂) → C
(iv) C₆H₅NO₂ → (Fe/HCl) → A → (NaNO₂+HCl) → B → (H₂O/H⁺) → C
(v) CH₃COOH → (NH₃) → A → (NaOBr) → B → (NaNO₂/HCl) → C
(vi) C₆H₅NO₂ → (Fe/HCl) → A → (HNO₂) → B → (C₆H₅OH) → CShow solution
(Note: The OCR for this reaction is partially unclear. Based on standard reactions:)
-
- A = (Propanenitrile)
- Partial hydrolysis of nitrile with :
-
- B = (Propanamide)
- C (with — likely or further reaction): If means , then
- C = (Propan-1-amine)
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(ii)
-
- A = (Benzonitrile)
-
- B = (Benzoic acid)
-
- C = (Benzamide)
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(iii)
-
- A = (Propanenitrile)
-
- B = (Propan-1-amine)
-
- C = (Propan-1-ol)
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(iv)
-
- A = (Aniline)
-
- B = (Benzenediazonium chloride)
-
- C = (Phenol)
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(v)
-
- A = (Ethanamide/Acetamide)
- (Hofmann bromamide reaction)
- B = (Methanamine)
-
- C = (Methanol)
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(vi)
-
- A = (Aniline)
-
- B = (Benzenediazonium chloride)
- Coupling reaction:
- C = (p-Hydroxyazobenzene — an orange azo dye)
9.10An aromatic compound 'A' on treatment with aqueous ammonia and heating forms compound 'B' which on heating with Br₂ and KOH forms a compound 'C' of molecular formula C₆H₇N. Write the structures and IUPAC names of compounds A, B and C.Show solution
- A + aq. + heat → B
- B + + KOH + heat → C ()
Analysis:
C has molecular formula . This corresponds to aniline (, MW = 93).
C is formed by Hofmann bromamide reaction (B + /KOH), so B must be an amide with one more carbon than C.
C = (aniline, 6C), so B must have 7 carbons → B = (benzamide).
B is formed from A + aq. + heat. This is the reaction of an acid (or acid derivative) with ammonia. So A = (benzoic acid).
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Reactions:
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Structures and IUPAC Names:
- A: — Benzoic acid
- B: — Benzamide
- C: — Aniline (Benzenamine)
9.11Complete the following reactions:
(i) C₆H₅NH₂ + CHCl₃ + alc. KOH →
(ii) C₆H₅N₂Cl + H₃PO₂ + H₂O →
(iii) C₆H₅NH₂ + H₂SO₄ (conc.) →
(iv) C₆H₅N₂Cl + C₂H₅OH →
(v) C₆H₅NH₂ + Br₂(aq) →
(vi) C₆H₅NH₂ + (CH₃CO)₂O →
(vii) C₆H₅N₂Cl → (i) HBF₄, (ii) NaNO₂/Cu, ΔShow solution
Product: Phenyl isocyanide (isocyanobenzene) — foul-smelling compound.
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(ii) Reductive deamination:
Product: Benzene (the diazonium group is replaced by H).
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(iii) Sulphonation (formation of sulphanilic acid):
Product: Sulphanilic acid (4-aminobenzenesulphonic acid)
(At room temperature, anilinium hydrogensulphate is formed first, which on heating gives sulphanilic acid.)
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(iv) Reaction of diazonium salt with ethanol:
Products: Benzene + nitrogen gas + acetaldehyde + HCl
(The diazonium group is replaced by H; ethanol is oxidised to acetaldehyde.)
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(v) Bromination of aniline:
Product: 2,4,6-Tribromoaniline (white precipitate)
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(vi) Acetylation of aniline:
Product: Acetanilide (N-phenylacetamide) + acetic acid
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(vii) Balz-Schiemann reaction:
Product: Fluorobenzene
9.12Why cannot aromatic primary amines be prepared by Gabriel phthalimide synthesis?Show solution
Gabriel phthalimide synthesis involves the reaction of potassium phthalimide with an alkyl halide (nucleophilic substitution, reaction), followed by hydrolysis.
Aryl halides (e.g., , ) are very unreactive towards nucleophilic substitution reactions under normal conditions. This is because:
1. The C–X bond in aryl halides has partial double bond character due to resonance of the lone pair of halogen with the -system of the ring.
2. The carbon attached to halogen in aryl halides is hybridised and is less susceptible to nucleophilic attack.
Therefore, potassium phthalimide (a nucleophile) cannot react with aryl halides, and hence aromatic primary amines cannot be prepared by Gabriel phthalimide synthesis.
9.13Write the reactions of (i) aromatic and (ii) aliphatic primary amines with nitrous acid.Show solution
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(i) Aromatic primary amine with nitrous acid (Diazotisation):
Aromatic primary amines react with (i.e., ) at 273–278 K to form stable arenediazonium salts.
Product: Benzenediazonium chloride (stable at low temperature)
The stability is due to resonance delocalisation of the positive charge into the benzene ring.
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(ii) Aliphatic primary amine with nitrous acid:
Aliphatic primary amines react with to form highly unstable alkyldiazonium salts which immediately decompose to give nitrogen gas, alcohol, and other products.
Example:
The evolution of gas is used as a test for primary aliphatic amines.
9.14Give plausible explanation for each of the following:
(i) Why are amines less acidic than alcohols of comparable molecular masses?
(ii) Why do primary amines have higher boiling point than tertiary amines?
(iii) Why are aliphatic amines stronger bases than aromatic amines?Show solution
Acidity depends on the tendency to donate a proton (). When an amine donates a proton, the resulting anion is (amide ion), and when an alcohol donates a proton, the resulting anion is (alkoxide ion).
Oxygen is more electronegative than nitrogen, so it can stabilise the negative charge better. The ion is more stable than ion.
Also, the O–H bond is more polar than the N–H bond, making it easier to break.
Therefore, alcohols donate protons more readily than amines → alcohols are more acidic than amines.
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(ii) Primary amines have higher boiling point than tertiary amines:
Boiling point depends on intermolecular forces, particularly hydrogen bonding.
- Primary amines (): have two N–H bonds available for intermolecular hydrogen bonding → strong intermolecular association → higher boiling point.
- Tertiary amines (): have no N–H bond → cannot form intermolecular hydrogen bonds → only weak van der Waals forces → lower boiling point.
Hence, primary amines have significantly higher boiling points than tertiary amines of comparable molecular mass.
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(iii) Aliphatic amines are stronger bases than aromatic amines:
Basic strength depends on the availability of the lone pair of electrons on nitrogen.
- In aliphatic amines (): the alkyl group () is electron-donating (+I effect), which increases the electron density on nitrogen, making the lone pair more available for protonation → stronger base.
- In aromatic amines (, e.g., aniline): the lone pair on nitrogen is in conjugation with the -electron system of the benzene ring (resonance). This delocalisation reduces the electron density on nitrogen, making the lone pair less available for protonation → weaker base.
Hence, aliphatic amines are stronger bases than aromatic amines.
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- Dept of Pre-University Education, Karnataka
- National Education Policy 2020 — education.gov.in
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