Aromatic amine

From Self-sufficiency
Jump to: navigation, search

An aromatic amine is an amine with an aromatic substituent - that is -NH2, -NH- or nitrogen group(s) attached to an aromatic hydrocarbon, whose structure usually contains one or more benzene rings. Aniline is the simplest example.

Aromatic amines, when protonated, usually have lower pKa's (are more acidic) than their non-aromatic analogs. This is due to the delocalization of the lone pair of electrons from the nitrogen into the ring.

Representative anilines
Aromatic amine CAS number Properties Uses
Aniline Aniline 62-53-3
o-toluidine o-toluidine 95-53-4
2,4,6-Trimethylaniline File:TrimethylanilinePIC.svg 88-05-1
Anisidine Anisidine 90-04-0
3-Trifluoromethylaniline 3-trifluoromethylaniline 98-16-8 Intermediate for herbicides, metabolite

See also

pl:Aminy aromatyczne pt:Amina aromática sk:Aromatický amín