Organic Chemistry of Explosives

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Direct nitration of amines 203

Bamberger^34 improved upon the method of Angeli^32 by using alkali metal alkoxides as bases


rather than the alkali metal. However, this method is still a low yielding route to nitramines


and is a consequence of nitrate esters functioning more like alkylating agents than nitrating


agents. This problem is largely overcome by using lithium bases, which react irreversibly with


the amine to form the conjugate base (Equation 5.7). Both butyl lithium and phenyl lithium are


commonly used as bases in these reactions and, in some reactions, nitrate esters other than ethyl


nitrate are used. The reaction of a series of primary amines with butyl lithium in the presence


of ethyl nitrate at− 78 ◦C in diethyl ether or hexane solvents has been used to prepare primary


nitramines in moderate to good yield, including: methylnitramine (35 %),iso-propylnitramine


(58 %),n-butylnitramine (49 %),sec-butylnitramine (45 %) andtert-butylnitramine (37 %).^35


This procedure also works well for the synthesis of nitramines from secondary amine substrates.


EtMgBr n-BuONO 2
R^1 R^2 NH R^1 R^2 N MgBr R^1 R^2 NNO 2 (Eq. 5.8)

Figure 5.21

More recently, Polish chemists^36 have reported a synthesis of both aryl and aliphatic sec-


ondary nitramines by treating amine substrates with ethyl magnesium bromide followed by


reaction withn-butyl nitrate (Equation 5.8). This method, which uses nonpolar solvents like


hexane or benzene, has been used to synthesize aliphatic secondary nitramines, andN-nitro-


N-methylanilines which otherwise undergo facile Bamberger rearrangement in the presence


of acid. The direct nitration ofN-unsubstituted arylamines usually requires the presence of an


electron-withdrawing group. Reactions are retarded and yields are low for sterically hindered


amines.


Despite the moderate to good yields obtained for a range of primary and secondary


nitramines, the above methods have not found wide use. Their use in organic synthesis is


severely limited by the incompatibility of many functional groups in the presence of strong


bases. This is particularly relevant to the synthesis of explosive materials, where nitrate ester


andC-nitro functionality are incompatible with strong bases.


5.3.2.2 Electron-deficient nitrate esters


Ordinarily, alkyl nitrate esters will not nitrate amines under neutral conditions. However,


Schmitt, Bedford and Bottaro^37 have reported the use of some novel electron-deficient ni-


trate esters for the directN-nitration of secondary amines. The most useful of these is 2-


(trifluoromethyl)-2-propyl nitrate, which nitrates a range of aliphatic secondary amines to the


corresponding nitramines in good to excellent yields. Nitrosamine formation is insignificant in


these reactions. 2-(Trifluoromethyl)-2-propyl nitrate cannot be used for the nitration of primary


amines, or secondary amines containing ethylenediamine functionality like that in piperazine.


Its use is limited with highly hindered amines or amines of diminished nucleophilicity due to


inductive or steric effects.


5.3.2.3 Cyanohydrin nitrates


Acetone cyanohydrin nitrate, a reagent prepared by treating acetone cyanohydrin with nitric


acid–acetic anhydride, has been used for theN-nitration of aliphatic and alicyclic secondary

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