18.1.2 Basicity of Amines

Cards (104)

  • What are amines derived from?
    Ammonia
  • Amines exhibit basic properties due to the presence of a lone pair of electrons on the nitrogen atom
  • The basicity of an amine is influenced by the availability of the lone pair
  • Electron-donating alkyl groups increase the basicity of amines by increasing electron density on the nitrogen
  • What stabilizes the conjugate acid of an amine, thereby increasing its basicity?
    Electron-donating groups
  • Order the basicity of primary, secondary, and tertiary amines from most to least basic
    1️⃣ Secondary
    2️⃣ Primary
    3️⃣ Tertiary
  • Match the type of amine with its relative basicity:
    Primary ↔️ Moderately Basic
    Secondary ↔️ More Basic
    Tertiary ↔️ Less Basic
  • Secondary amines are generally more basic than primary amines due to electron-donating alkyl groups
  • Which type of amine is most affected by steric hindrance?
    Tertiary
  • Match the type of amine with its relative basicity compared to aliphatic amines:
    Aromatic amines ↔️ Less Basic
    Aliphatic amines ↔️ More Basic
  • Why are aromatic amines less basic than aliphatic amines?
    Delocalization of lone pair
  • The delocalization of the lone pair in aromatic amines makes it less available for protonation
  • The delocalization of the lone pair in aromatic amines reduces their basicity
  • What effect do electron-donating groups have on amine basicity?
    Increase
  • Alkyl groups are examples of electron-donating groups that increase amine basicity
  • Electron-withdrawing groups such as halogens decrease electron density on the nitrogen, making the lone pair less available for protonation
  • Electron-donating groups increase basicity, while electron-withdrawing groups decrease
  • What is a common example of an electron-donating group?
    Alkyl groups
  • Halogens are electron-withdrawing groups that reduce electron density on nitrogen.
  • Electron-donating groups increase electron density on nitrogen
  • Which type of electronic effect increases the basicity of an amine?
    Electron-donating effect
  • Alkyl groups are electron-donating groups that enhance amine basicity.
  • Amines are organic compounds derived from ammonia
  • What is the key property of amines that makes them basic?
    Lone pair of electrons
  • Order the basicity of different types of amines from most basic to least basic.
    1️⃣ Secondary (R_{2}NH</latex>)
    2️⃣ Primary (RNH2RNH_{2})
    3️⃣ Tertiary (R3NR_{3}N)
  • Which factor stabilizes the conjugate acid of an amine, increasing its basicity?
    Electron density
  • Electron-donating groups increase the availability of the lone pair in amines.
  • Alkyl groups increase electron density on the nitrogen atom, making the lone pair more available for protonation
  • Why are aromatic amines less basic than aliphatic amines?
    Lone pair delocalization
  • Bulky alkyl groups around the nitrogen atom can hinder the approach of protons, reducing basicity.
  • Match the amine type with its basicity:
    Aliphatic ↔️ More Basic
    Aromatic ↔️ Less Basic
  • Why is the lone pair in aromatic amines less available for protonation?
    Delocalization into the ring
  • The structure of an aliphatic amine is RNH2R - NH_{2}
  • Electron-donating groups like alkyl groups increase the availability of the lone pair for protonation
  • Which group is an example of an electron-withdrawing group attached to nitrogen in an amine?
    Halogen
  • Steric hindrance in amines reduces the accessibility of the lone pair for protonation.
  • Order the protonation accessibility of different types of amines from highest to lowest.
    1️⃣ Primary (RNH2RNH_{2})
    2️⃣ Secondary (R2NHR_{2}NH)
    3️⃣ Tertiary (R3NR_{3}N)
  • Which type of amine has low steric hindrance and allows easier protonation?
    Primary amine
  • Secondary amines have higher basicity compared to tertiary amines due to less steric hindrance.
  • Secondary amines, with two alkyl groups, offer the highest basicity