21.10 Aromatic Six-Membered-Ring Heterocycles
Pyridine
When one of the carbons of a benzene ring is replaced by a nitrogen, the resulting
compound is called pyridine.
The pyridinium ion is a stronger acid than a typical ammonium ion because the
acidic hydrogen of a pyridinium ion is attached to an hybridized nitrogen, which is
more electronegative than an hybridized nitrogen (Section 6.9).
Pyridine is a tertiary amine, so it undergoes reactions characteristic of tertiary amines.
For example, pyridine undergoes reactions with alkyl halides (Section 10.4), and it
reacts with hydrogen peroxide to form an N-oxide (Section 21.7).
PROBLEM 17 SOLVED
Will an amide be formed from the reaction of an acyl chloride with an aqueous solution of
pyridine? Explain your answer.
N +
+ CH 3 I
N
CH 3
I−
N +
+ HO OH
N
OH + HO−
+N
O−
+ H 2 O
pKa = 0.79
N-methylpyridinium iodide
pyridine-N-oxide
SN 2
+ H+
+ N
N
H H
+ H+
+ NH
N
H
pyridinium ion
pyridine
piperidinium ion piperidine
pKa = 5.16
pKa = 11.12
sp^2
sp^3
sp^3
sp^2
N
N
pyridine orbital structure of pyridine
these
electrons are
in an sp^2 orbital
perpendicular
(^4) to the p orbitals
3
1
6 2
5
902 CHAPTER 21 More About Amines • Heterocyclic Compounds
Tutorial:
Lone-pair electrons on
nitrogen heterocycles
3-D Molecule:
Pyridine