Alkylation, acylation, and sulfonation, etc. Aside from their basicity, the dominant reactivity of amines is their
nucleophilicity. Most primary amines are good
ligands for metal ions to give
coordination complexes. Amines are alkylated by alkyl halides.
Acyl chlorides and
acid anhydrides react with primary and secondary amines to form
amides (the "
Schotten–Baumann reaction"). Similarly, with sulfonyl chlorides, one obtains
sulfonamides. This transformation, known as the
Hinsberg reaction, is a chemical test for the presence of amines. Because amines are basic, they neutralize
acids to form the corresponding
ammonium salts . When formed from carboxylic acids and primary and secondary amines, these salts thermally dehydrate to form the corresponding
amides. : { \underbrace\ce{H-\!\!\overset{\displaystyle R1 \atop |}{\undersetC-OH}_\text{carboxylic acid} -> }\ \underbrace\ce{{H-\overset{\displaystyle R1 \atop |}{\underset{\undersetC-R3}_\text{amide} + \underbrace\ce{H2O}_\text{water} } Amines undergo
sulfamation upon treatment with
sulfur trioxide or sources thereof: :R2NH + SO3 -> R2NSO3H
Diazotization Amines reacts with
nitrous acid to give diazonium salts. The alkyl diazonium salts are of little importance because they are too unstable. The most important members are derivatives of aromatic amines such as
aniline ("phenylamine") (A = aryl or naphthyl): :ANH2 + HNO2 + HX -> AN2+ + X- + 2 H2O Anilines and naphthylamines form more stable
diazonium salts, which can be isolated in the crystalline form. Diazonium salts undergo a variety of useful transformations involving replacement of the group with anions. For example,
cuprous cyanide gives the corresponding nitriles: :AN2+ + Y- -> AY + N2 Aryldiazoniums couple with electron-rich aromatic compounds such as a
phenol to form
azo compounds. Such reactions are widely applied to the production of dyes.
Conversion to imines Imine formation is an important reaction. Primary amines react with
ketones and
aldehydes to form
imines. In the case of
formaldehyde (R' H), these products typically exist as cyclic
trimers: RNH2 + R'_2C=O -> R'_2C=NR + H2O Reduction of these imines gives secondary amines: R'_2C=NR + H2 -> R'_2CH-NHR Similarly, secondary amines react with ketones and aldehydes to form
enamines: R2NH + R'(R
CH2)C=O -> RCH=C(NR2)R' + H2O
Mercuric ions reversibly oxidize
tertiary amines with an
α hydrogen to
iminium ions: Hg^2+ + R2NCH2R' Hg + [R2N=CHR']+ + H+
Overview An overview of the reactions of amines is given below: ==Biological activity==