Amine oxide
In chemistry, an amine oxide, also known as an amine N-oxide or simply N-oxide, is a chemical compound that has the chemical formula. It contains a nitrogen-oxygen coordinate covalent bond with three additional hydrogen and/or substituent-groups attached to nitrogen. Sometimes it is written as or, alternatively, as.
In the strict sense, the term amine oxide applies only to oxides of tertiary amines. Sometimes it is also used for the analogous derivatives of primary and secondary amines.
Commonly, amine oxides are white, water-soluble solids:
- trimethylamine-N-oxide], , an osmolyte found in molluscs
- pyridine-N-oxide,
- N-methylmorpholine N-oxide,, a nucleophilic oxidant
Applications
Amine oxides are surfactants commonly used in consumer products such as shampoos, conditioners, detergents, and hard surface cleaners. Alkyl dimethyl amine oxide is the most commercially used amine oxide. They are considered a high production volume class of compounds in more than one member country of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development ; with annual production over in the US, Europe, and Japan, respectively. In North America, more than 95% of amine oxides are used in home cleaning products. They serve as stabilizers, thickeners, emollients, emulsifiers, and conditioners with active concentrations in the range of 0.1–10%. The remainder is used in personal care, institutional, commercial products and for unique patented uses such as photography.
Image:Lauryldimethylamine oxide.png|left|388px|thumb|Lauryldimethylamine oxide, a fatty amine derivative, is a germicidal ingredient in many cosmetics.
Properties
Amine oxides are highly polar molecules and have a polarity close to that of quaternary ammonium salts. Small amine oxides are very hydrophilic and have an excellent water solubility and a very poor solubility in most organic solvents.Amine oxides are weak bases with a pKb of around 4.5 that form, cationic hydroxylamines, upon protonation at a pH below their pKb.
Formation of amine oxides can also be an unwanted process, such as the oxidation of amine-based reagents. Amines left exposed to air can undergo oxidation from atmospheric oxygen, slowly reacting with oxygen to form N-oxides. This process can cause the amines to turn a yellowish color and the N-oxides can decompose further into byproducts. Oxidation due to air can be prevented by storing reagents under inert atmosphere.
Synthesis
Almost all amine oxides are prepared by the oxidation of either tertiary aliphatic amines or aromatic N-heterocycles. Hydrogen peroxide is the most common reagent both industrially and in academia, however peracids are also important. More specialised oxidising agents can see niche use, for instance Caro's acid or mCPBA. Spontaneous or catalysed reactions using molecular oxygen are rare. Certain other reactions will also produce amine oxides, such as the retro-Cope elimination, however they are rarely employed.Reactions
Amine oxides exhibit many kinds of reactions.- Pyrolytic elimination. Amine oxides, when heated to 150–200 °C undergo a Cope reaction to form a hydroxylamine and an alkene. The reaction requires the alkyl groups to have hydrogens at the beta-carbon
- Reduction to amines. Amine oxides are readily converted to the parent amine by common reduction reagents including lithium aluminium hydride, sodium borohydride, catalytic reduction, zinc / acetic acid, and iron / acetic acid. Pyridine N-oxides can be deoxygenated by phosphorus oxychloride
- Sacrificial catalysis. Oxidants can be regenerated by reduction of N-oxides, as in the case of regeneration of osmium tetroxide by N-methylmorpholine N-oxide in the Upjohn dihydroxylation.
- O-Alkylation. Pyridine N-oxides react with alkyl halides to the O-alkylated product
- Bis-ter-pyridine derivatives adsorbed on silver surfaces are discussed to react with oxygen to bis-ter-pyridine N-oxide. This reaction can be followed by video-scanning tunneling microscopy with sub-molecular resolution.
- In the Meisenheimer rearrangement, certain N-oxides rearrange to alkoxylamines
- In the, a tertiary N-oxide is cleaved by acetic acid anhydride to the corresponding acetamide and aldehyde:
Metabolites
Amine oxides of anti-cancer drugs have been developed as prodrugs that are metabolized in the oxygen-deficient cancer tissue to the active drug.