Ammonium carbamate
Ammonium carbamate is a chemical compound with the formula consisting of ammonium cation and carbamate anion. It is a white solid that is extremely soluble in water, less so in alcohol. Ammonium carbamate can be formed by the reaction of ammonia with carbon dioxide, and will slowly decompose to those gases at ordinary temperatures and pressures. It is an intermediate in the industrial synthesis of urea, an important fertilizer.
Properties
Solid-gas equilibrium
In a closed container solid ammonium carbamate is in equilibrium with carbon dioxide and ammoniaLower temperatures shift the equilibrium towards the carbamate.
At higher temperatures ammonium carbamate condenses into urea:
This reaction was first discovered in 1870 by Bassarov, by heating ammonium carbamate in sealed glass tubes at temperatures ranging from 130 to 140 °C.
Equilibrium in water
At ordinary temperatures and pressures, ammonium carbamate exists in aqueous solutions as an equilibrium with ammonia and carbon dioxide, and the anions bicarbonate,, and carbonate,. Indeed, solutions of ammonium carbonate or bicarbonate will contain some carbamate anions too.Structure
The structure of solid ammonium carbamate has been confirmed by X-ray crystallography. The oxygen centers form hydrogen bonds to the ammonium cation. There are two polymorphs, α and β, both in the orthorhombic crystal system but differing in their space group. The α polymorph is in space group Pbca (no. 61), whereas the β polymorph is in Ibam (no. 72). The α polymorph is more volatile.Preparation
From liquid ammonia and dry ice
Ammonium carbamate is prepared by the direct reaction between liquid ammonia and dry ice :From gaseous ammonia and carbon dioxide
Ammonium carbamate can be prepared by reaction of the two gases at high temperature and high pressure.It can also be obtained by bubbling gaseous and in anhydrous ethanol, 1-propanol, or DMF at ambient pressure and 0 °C. The carbamate precipitates and can be separated by simple filtration, and the liquid containing the unreacted ammonia can be returned to the reactor. The absence of water prevents the formation of bicarbonate and carbonate, and no ammonia is lost.
Uses
Urea synthesis
Ammonium carbamate is an intermediate in the industrial production of urea.A typical industrial plant that makes urea can produce up to 4000 tons a day.
in this reactor and can then be dehydrated to urea according to the following equation: