These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.
Pubmed for Handhelds
PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS
Search MEDLINE/PubMed
Title: N-nitrosation of amines by NO2 and NO: a theoretical study. Author: Zhao YL, Garrison SL, Gonzalez C, Thweatt WD, Marquez M. Journal: J Phys Chem A; 2007 Mar 22; 111(11):2200-5. PubMed ID: 17388303. Abstract: Gas-phase nitrosation of amines implies a nonionic pathway different from the nitrosonium nitrosation via acidification of nitrite. Electronic structure calculations discussed in this work suggest a free radical mechanism, in which NO2 abstracts a hydrogen atom from the nitrogen in primary and secondary amines to form an intermediate complex of an aminyl radical and nitrous acid. The aminyl radical intermediate is then quenched by nitric oxide, leading to the formation of nitrosamine. High-level calculations (CBS-QB3) show that alkyl substitutions on amines can activate the H-abstraction reaction. Thus, while H-abstraction from NH3 was found to exhibit a reaction barrier (DeltaH) of 106 kJ/mol, similar calculations indicate that the corresponding barriers decrease to 72 and 45 kJ/mol for methylamine and dimethylamine, respectively. Heterocyclic secondary amines have also been investigated in a similar manner. The five-membered-ring (5-m-r) amine appears to be the most reactive: pyrrolidine (DeltaH=30 kJ/mol), azetidine (DeltaH=44 kJ/mol), piperidine (DeltaH=44 kJ/mol), and aziridine (DeltaH=74 kJ/mol). The reaction barrier for 1H-pyrrole, an aromatic 5-m-r secondary amine, was found to be 59 kJ/mol. The origin of the high activity for the 5-m-r alkylamine stems from a hydrogen-bond-like interaction between the aminyl radical and the nascent nitrous acid molecule. This theoretical study suggests that, in the presence of nitrogen oxides, the gas-phase nitrosation of secondary amines is feasible.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]