Organic Syntheses, CV 5, 336
Checked by William G. Dauben and William C. Schwarzel.
1. Procedure
Caution! Dinitrogen tetroxide is extremely toxic and should only be handled in an excellent hood.
A.
N-(2-Phenylethyl)benzamide. To a solution of
12.1 g. (0.10 mole) of 2-phenylethylamine and
7.9 g. (0.10 mole) of pyridine in a
250-ml. Erlenmeyer flask immersed in an ice bath is added, slowly with stirring,
15.5 g. (0.11 mole) of benzoyl chloride. The resulting crystalline mixture is extracted with
chloroform and the
chloroform solution washed with water,
5% hydrochloric acid,
5% sodium hydroxide, water, and dried. The solvent is removed under reduced pressure to yield
20–22 g. (
89–98%) of the crude amide, m.p.
100–110°, which is of sufficient purity for use in the next step. If desired, however, the crude product may be recrystallized from
95% ethanol, m.p.
115–116°.
B.
N-Nitroso-N-(2-phenylethyl)benzamide. A solution of
10.4 g. (0.046 mole) of the crude N-(2-phenylethyl)benzamide,
7.36 g. (0.09 mole) of anhydrous sodium acetate, and
50 ml. of glacial acetic acid is placed in a
250-ml. Erlenmeyer flask equipped with a drying tube, and the mixture is cooled to the crystallization point of the
acetic acid (Note
1). A solution of
dinitrogen tetroxide (Note 2), (Note 3) in glacial acetic acid (85 ml. of a solution approximately 1M in N2O4) is then added with stirring. The reaction mixture is allowed to warm to about 15° (15 minutes), and then it is poured into a mixture of ice and water. The yellow solid nitroso derivative is dissolved in
75 ml. of carbon tetrachloride, and this solution is washed with
5% sodium bicarbonate, water, and dried. The solution is used directly in the next step.
If the nitroso derivative is desired, the yellow solid is separated by filtration, washed with water,
5% sodium bicarbonate solution, water, and dried under reduced pressure at room temperature. The solid is recrystallized from
ether to give yellow needles of pure nitrosoamide; yield
7.5 g. (
64%), m.p.
57–58° (dec.).
2. Notes
1.
Carbon tetrachloride,
methylene chloride, and other solvents may be used in this reaction. In these cases it is profitable to cool the reaction mixture to −40° or lower and then allow the mixture to warm to 10° after the
dinitrogen tetroxide has been added.
2.
Dinitrogen tetroxide (nitrogen dioxide) is available from the Matheson Company, Inc., East Rutherford, New Jersey.
3.
Dinitrogen tetroxide is a
poisonous gas and should only be handled in a
well-ventilated hood. The boiling point of
dinitrogen tetroxide is 21°, and it is convenient to condense a given volume (or weight, density = 1.5 g./ml. at 0°) from a cylinder of
dinitrogen tetroxide and to pour the liquid into the required amount of solvent, or into the reaction mixture directly at temperatures below
ca. −20°. Impure
dinitrogen tetroxide, which is green because of the presence of lower oxides of
nitrogen, may also be used.
4. Any nonreactive solvent may be used, but excessive temperatures favor the concurrent elimination reaction.
5. The
sodium carbonate may be omitted if it is desired to titrate the acid formed in the reaction. The carbonate prevents denitrosation (observed in a few cases).
3. Discussion
The nitrosation of amides may also be carried out with
nitrosyl chloride.
2 Related methods of deamination of aliphatic amines are the
triazene3 and nitrous acid methods.
4
4. Merits of the Preparation
Dinitrogen tetroxide is the most versatile of the nitrosating reagents and, in addition, it is readily available. The nitrosoamide method of deamination gives far superior yields and much less skeletal isomerization than the nitrous acid method (which is essentially limited to aqueous media), and it leads to a greater retention of optical activity than the triazene method.
3 In general, the nitrosoamide decomposition proceeds with retention of configuration.
5,6
The method outlined here works well for amides of primary carbinamines. For amides of secondary carbinamines, lower temperatures must be used for the nitrosation step (

0°), and solvents such as
methylene chloride are used in place of the
acetic acid (the amide need not be completely soluble in the solvent); the procedure of White and Aufdermarsh
5 used for a
trimethylacetamide is recommended in such a case. Nitrosoamides of tertiary carbinamines are very unstable, and the "salt method" of preparation is suggested for these compounds.
6
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