Organic Chemistry of Explosives

(coco) #1

220 Synthetic Routes toN-Nitro


5.6.2.3 Methylenediamines


Methylenediamines are readily synthesized from the reaction of secondary amines with


formaldehyde. Many aliphatic amines are too basic for direct nitration without a chloride cata-


lyst, and even then, nitrosamine formation can be a problem. Their conversion into intermediate


methylenediamines before nitration is therefore a useful route to secondary nitramines. The


success of these nitrolysis reactions is attributed to the inherent low basicity of the methylene-


diamine nitrogens.


N

NO 2

O 2 N NO 2

N

NN

N

NO 2

NO 2

O 2 N

O 2 N

N
N

N

N

3
(RDX)

NN

4
(HMX)

104

+

NH 4 NO 3 ,
Ac 2 O, HNO 3

Figure 5.51

The most important nitrolysis reaction to date is the formation of RDX (3) and HMX (4) from


the caged methylenediamine known as hexamine (104). These important military explosives


were first mass manufactured by this route towards the end of the Second World War and they


are still prepared by this route today. The process uses a mixture of acetic anhydride, ammonium


nitrate and nitric acid. The nitrolysis of hexamine is one of the most widely studied reactions


in the history of explosives. Many other cyclic and linear polynitramines have been isolated


from these reactions and this rich chemistry is discussed in more detail in Section 5.15.


N
C
H 2

N

N

NO 2

O 2 N NO 2

(CH 2 )N
NN

N

O 2 N NO 2

O NO
O

N

NO 2
NH 4 NO 3 , Ac 2 O,
HNO 3 , 55 °C

n

n
n = 2 or 3

+
105

106

Figure 5.52

Chapman^113 studied the nitrolysis of symmetrical methylenediamines. The nitrolysis of


N, N, N′,N′-tetramethylmethylenediamine with nitric acid–acetic anhydride–ammonium nitrate


mixtures gives both dimethylnitramine and RDX; the latter probably arises from the nitrol-


ysis of hexamine formed from the reaction of ammonium nitrate and formaldehyde released


from the hydrolysis of the methylenediamine. The same reaction with some morpholine-based


methylenediamines (105) allows the synthesis of 1,3,5-trinitro-1,3,5-triazacycloalkanes (106).


NNN

NO 2 NO 2 NO 2
N

NO 2

N

TFAA, HNO 3

21 %
107 108

3

Figure 5.53
Free download pdf