Nitrolysis 219
from this study were found to be powerful explosives. Adolph and Cichra^108 found that the
hydrochloride salt oftert-butyldimethylamine (99) undergoes nitrolysis to dimethylnitramine
(100) in good yield when treated with nitric acid in acetic anhydride (Table 5.5, Entry 5); the
free amine base gives a much lower yield of nitramine product.
In some related work, Lear and co-workers^109 prepared the powerful cyclic nitramine explo-
sive Keto-RDX (102) from the nitrolysis–nitration of 2-oxa-5-tert-butyltriazone (101). Pagoria
and co-workers30a,^110 conducted a full study on the effect of different nitrating agents on the
yield of Keto-RDX (Table 5.6).
HN
N
NH
O
t-Bu
101
N
N
N
O
NO 2
102
(Keto-RDX or K-6)
O 2 N NO 2
NO 2 BF 4
Nitrating agent Yield (%)
Source: Reprinted with permission from C. L. Coon, E. S. Jessop, A. R.
Mitchell, P. F. Pagoria and R. D. Schmidt, in Nitration: Recent Laboratory
and Industrial Developments, ACS Symposium Series 623, Ed. L. F.
Albright, R. V. C. Carr and R. J. Schmitt, American Chemical Society,
Washington, DC, 155 (1996); Copyright 1996 American Chemical Society.
Table 5.6
57
43
57
21
0
0
40
TFAA/N 2 O 5 /HNO 3
TFAA/100 % HNO 3
Ac 2 O/100 % HNO 3
Ac 2 O/90 % HNO 3
Ac 2 O/70 % HNO 3
H 2 SO 4 /HNO 3
Table 5.6
Effect of nitrolysis agent on the yield of Keto-RDX (ref. 30a)
N
O 2 N
tBu
103
HNO 3 , Ac 2 O, 35 %
or
NH 4 NO 3 , Ac 2 O, 90 %
NO 2
N
O 2 N
NO 2
6
(TNAZ)
NO 2
Figure 5.50
Nitrolysis of atert-butyl group is also a key step in the synthesis of the high performance
explosive known as TNAZ (6). The nitrolysis of theN-tert-butylazetidine (103) has been
achieved with acetic anhydride–nitric acid^111 and acetic anhydride–ammonium nitrate.^112