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Triisopropylamine
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Triisopropylamine
Skeletal formula of triisopropylamine
Skeletal formula of triisopropylamine
Names
Preferred IUPAC name
N,N-Di(propan-2-yl)propan-2-amine
Other names
Tri(propan-2-yl)amine
(Triisopropyl)amine
Identifiers
3D model (JSmol)
ChemSpider
ECHA InfoCard 100.020.289 Edit this at Wikidata
EC Number
  • 222-317-5
UNII
  • InChI=1S/C9H21N/c1-7(2)10(8(3)4)9(5)6/h7-9H,1-6H3 ☒N
    Key: RKBCYCFRFCNLTO-UHFFFAOYSA-N ☒N
  • CC(C)N(C(C)C)C(C)C
Properties
C9H21N
Molar mass 143.274 g·mol−1
Appearance Colorless liquid
Odor Ichtyal, ammoniacal
Density 0.752 g/cm3
Boiling point 131.8 °C (269.2 °F; 404.9 K) 47°C at 1.9 kPa
Related compounds
Related amines
Related compounds
Except where otherwise noted, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C [77 °F], 100 kPa).
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Triisopropylamine is an organic chemical compound consisting of three isopropyl groups bound to a central nitrogen atom.[1][2] As a hindered tertiary amine, it can be used as a non-nucleophilic base and as a stabilizer for polymers; however, its applications are limited by its relatively high cost and difficult synthesis.

Structure

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In the early 1990s, theoretical studies and electron diffraction analysis of the 3D structure of the molecule, in the gas phase or in non-polar solvents, indicated that the bonds between the nitrogen atom and the three carbon atoms were nearly coplanar in the ground state, instead of forming a trigonal pyramid as in simpler amines.[3][4] The average C-N-C angle was claimed to be 119.2°,[2] much closer to the 120° of the flat configuration than to the 111.8° of trimethylamine. This peculiarity was attributed to steric hindrance by the bulky isopropyl radicals. However, in 1998 X-ray diffraction analysis of the crystallized solid showed that the C3N core is actually pyramidal, with the N atom lying approximately 0.28 Å off the carbons' plane (whereas in trimethylamine the distance is about 0.45 Å). However the researchers could not rule out the crystal field effect as the cause of the asymmetry.[5]

The C-C-C planes of the isopropyl groups are slightly tilted (about 5°) relative to the threefold symmetry axis of the C3N core.[3][5][6]

Even more hindered amines

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Triisopropylamine is notable as being among the most sterically hindered amines currently known. To date, di(tert-alkyl)(sec-alkyl)amines like di-tert-butyl(isopropyl)amine (tBu2iPrN) and diadamantylcyclohexylamine (Ad2CyN) have been prepared in low yield, as have a handful of tri-tert-alkylamines in which two of the tert-alkyl groups are tied together in a five-membered ring. As a result of the extreme steric crowding, these tertiary amines were found to be unusually susceptible to β-elimination to give an alkene and a secondary amine, even at temperatures close to room temperature (as low as 40 °C). As a result of these and other synthetic difficulties, the authors of a 2018 study predict that the even more crowded tri-tert-butylamine (tBu3N, unknown as of 2023) will likely remain a longstanding unsolved synthetic challenge, even though ab initio calculations indicate that it would be of reasonable stability if it could be prepared.[7] Calculations indicate that tri-tert-butylamine should be planar at nitrogen. Though arguably a more hindered molecule, the structurally analogous tri-tert-alkyl carbinol 2,2,4,4-tetramethyl-3-t-butyl-pentane-3-ol (tri-tert-butylcarbinol, tBu3COH), has been known for decades (prepared by Bartlett and coworkers in 1945).

Preparation

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Steric effects make triisopropylamine difficult to synthesise and unlike less hindered tertiary amines (such as triethylamine) it cannot be produced by the alkylation of ammonia with alcohol; attempts to do so stall at diisopropylamine. It can be prepared from diisopropylamine on the laboratory scale:[2]

See also

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References

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