Organic Chemistry of Explosives

(coco) #1

5 Synthetic Routes toN-Nitro Functionality


5.1 Introduction


Aromatic and aliphatic nitro compounds are of huge industrial importance and are invaluable


intermediates in organic synthesis. This has in part fuelled the enormous amount of research


into nitration. Compounds resulting from the nitration of nitrogen are of far less use for main-


stream organic synthesis. However, the N–NO 2 (N-nitro) group is an important ‘explosophore’


and is present in many energetic materials. Consequently, research intoN-nitration has been


exclusively driven by the use of the products as energetic materials. Some of these compounds


are in wide use today as high explosives and ingredients of propellants and are manufactured


on an enormous scale.


R NHNO 2

R
N
R

NO 2
N

NO 2
NO 2

O

R'

R'

1 ° nitramine 2 ° nitramine 2 ° nitramide nitrimine

R
R

N

Figure 5.1

There are four important groups ofN-nitro compounds which are relevant to energetic ma-


terials synthesis.^1 These are primary nitramines, secondary nitramines, secondary nitramides


(includingN-nitroureas andN, N′-dinitroureas) and nitrimines. The synthesis and incorpora-


tion of theseN-nitro functionalities into organic compounds is the focus of this chapter.


The replacement of amine and amide hydrogen with a nitro group via direct nitration is


an important route toN-nitro functionality. However, the cleavage of other bonds is also


important. In the case of C–N bond cleavage the process is known as ‘nitrolysis’ and is an


invaluable route to many energetic materials (Section 5.6). The nitrolysis of hexamine and the


syntheses of the important explosives HMX and RDX are discussed in Section 5.15. This area


of chemistry could easily demand a separate chapter of its own and is the most complex and


diverse in the field of nitramine chemistry.


Organic Chemistry of Explosives J. P. Agrawal and R. D. Hodgson
©C2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.


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