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Amides David Matin City and Islington College

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1 Amides David Matin City and Islington College

2 Learning Outcomes 8th functional group – amides Drawing amides
Naming amides Physical properties of amides Chemical properties of amides Hand-out and slideshow slide

3 Amides Amides are derivatives of carboxylic acids in which a nitrogen group (–NH2) replaces the –OH group of carboxylic acids. Hand-out and slideshow slide

4 Preparation of Amides Amides are produced by reacting a carboxylic acid with ammonia or a 1 or 2 amine with heat. Hand-out and slideshow slide

5 Naming Amides For IUPAC naming, the -oic acid from the carboxylic acid name ending is replaced with -amide For common names, the -ic acid from the carboxylic acid name ending is replaced with -amide O  methanamide (IUPAC) H—C—NH2 formamide (common)  propanamide (IUPAC) CH3—CH2—C—NH2 propionamide (common) Hand-out and slideshow slide

6 Naming Amides with N Groups
An alkyl group attached to the nitrogen of an amide is named with the prefix N-, followed by the alkyl name. O H  │ CH3 —C—N—CH3 N-methylethanamide (IUPAC) N-methylacetamide (common) O H  │ CH3—CH2 —C—N—CH2—CH3 N-ethylpropanamide (IUPAC) N-ethylpropionamide (common) Hand-out and slideshow slide

7 Aromatic Amide The aromatic amine is benzamide.
Hand-out and slideshow slide

8 Learning Check Give the IUPAC and common names for the following.
butanamide (IUPAC) butryamide (common) N-ethylethanamide (IUPAC) N-ethylacetamide (common) Hand-out and Group discussion asking for the answer to the question (also a slideshow slide)

9 Learning Check Draw the structures of the following. Pentanamide
N-methylbutyramide Hand-out and Group discussion asking for the answer to the question (also a slideshow slide)

10 Some Amides in Health and Medicine
Urea is the end product of protein metabolism. Saccharin is an artificial sweetener. Some amides, such as phenobarbital (Luminal) and pentobarbital (Nembutal), are barbiturates. Acetaminophen is used to reduce fever and pain. Hand-out and slideshow slide

11 Some Amides in Health and Medicine
Hand-Out and slideshow slide

12 Solubility of Amides Amides with one to five carbon atoms are soluble in water because they can form hydrogen bonds with water molecules. Hydrogen bonding effects are diminished when molecules have more than five carbon atoms, therefore reducing solubility. Hand-Out and slideshow slide

13 Hydrolysis of Amides Amides undergo
acid hydrolysis to produce a carboxylic acid and an ammonium salt base hydrolysis to produce the salt of a carboxylic acid and an amine or ammonia Hand-out and slideshow slide

14 Hydrolysis Reactions Hand-out and slideshow slide

15 Preparation of amides from carboxylic acids, acyl chlorides (acid chlorides) and acid anhydrides
Making amides from carboxylic acids ammonium ethanoate is made by adding ammonium carbonate to an excess of ethanoic acid. When the reaction is complete, the mixture is heated and the ammonium salt dehydrates producing ethanamide. Hand-out and slideshow slide Summary of the process The carboxylic acid is first converted into an ammonium salt which then produces an amide on heating. The ammonium salt is formed by adding solid ammonium carbonate to an excess of the acid.

16 Preparation of amides from carboxylic acids, acyl chlorides (acid chlorides) and acid anhydrides
Making amides from acyl chlorides the ammonia reacts with the ethanoyl chloride to give ethanamide and hydrogen chloride gas. Then the hydrogen chloride produced reacts with excess ammonia to give ammonium chloride. Hand-out and slideshow slide . . . and you can combine all this together to give one overall equation:

17 Preparation of amides from carboxylic acids, acyl chlorides (acid chlorides) and acid anhydrides
Making amides from acid anhydrides An acid anhydride is what you get if you remove a molecule of water from two carboxylic acid -COOH groups. Hand-out and slideshow slide

18 the two products of the reaction overall can look confusingly similar
Continue…. ethanamide is formed together with ethanoic acid Then the ethanoic acid produced reacts with excess ammonia to give ammonium ethanoate Hand-out and slideshow slide . . . and you can combine all this together to give one overall equation the two products of the reaction overall can look confusingly similar

19 Polyamides Polyamides are polymers where the repeating units are held together by amide links. An amide group has the formula - CONH2. An amide link has this structure: Hand-out and slideshow slides

20 Nylon In nylon, the repeating units contain chains of carbon atoms. There are various different types of nylon depending on the nature of those chains. Hand-out and slideshow slide

21 Continue…. Nylon-6,6 Nylon-6,6 is made from two monomers each of which contain 6 carbon atoms - hence its name. Hand-out and slideshow slide

22 Continue…. 1. One of the monomers is a 6 carbon acid with a -COOH group at each end - hexanedioic acid. 2.The other monomer is a 6 carbon chain with an amino group, -NH2, at each end. This is 1,6-diaminohexane (also known as hexane-1,6-diamine). Hand-out and slideshow slide

23 Continue…. When these two compounds polymerise, the amine and acid groups combine, each time with the loss of a molecule of water. This is known as condensation polymerisation. Hand-out and slideshow slide

24 Continue… Nylon-6 Nylon-6 is made from a monomer called caprolactam Notice that this already contains an amide link. When this molecule polymerises, the ring opens, and the molecules join up in a continuous chain. Hand-out and slideshow slide

25 Kevlar Kevlar is similar in structure to nylon-6,6 except that instead of the amide links joining chains of carbon atoms together, they join benzene rings. The two monomers are benzene-1,4-dicarboxylic acid and 1,4-diaminobenzene. Hand-out and slideshow slide If you line these up and remove water between the -COOH and -NH2 groups in the same way as we did with nylon-6,6, you get the structure of Kevlar:

26 Uses of Polyamides Nylon Apart from obvious uses in textiles for clothing and carpets, a lot of nylon is used to make tyre cords - the inner structure of a vehicle tyre underneath the rubber. The fibres are also used in ropes, and nylon can be cast into solid shapes for cogs and bearings in machines, for example. Kevlar Kevlar is a very strong material - about five times as strong as steel, weight for weight. It is used in bulletproof vests, in composites for boat construction, in lightweight mountaineering ropes, and for lightweight skis and racquets - amongst many other things. Hand-out and slideshow slide

27 Hydrolysis of Polyamides
Simple amides are easily hydrolysed by reaction with dilute acids or alkalis. Polyamides are fairly readily attacked by strong acids, but are much more resistant to alkaline hydrolysis. Hydrolysis is faster at higher temperatures. Hydrolysis by water alone is so slow as to be completely unimportant. Kevlar is rather more resistant to hydrolysis than nylon is. If you spill something like dilute sulphuric acid on a fabric made from nylon, the amide linkages are broken. The long chains break and you can eventually end up with the original monomers - hexanedioic acid and 1,6-diaminohexane. Because you produce small molecules rather than the original polymer, the fibres are destroyed, and you end up with a hole! Hand-out and slideshow slide

28 For further information please contact The STEM Alliance or visit Hand-out and slideshow slide


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