Dehydration
of amides to give nitriles
Description: Primary amides can be converted
to nitriles with a dehydrating reagent such as P2O5 .
Notes: Note that the net effect of this reaction is to
remove two H atoms and one O from the amide. For this reason this is called a “dehydration”.
Only primary amides work for this reaction. Other
reagents can be used for this, however, such as thionyl chloride (SOCl2)
Examples:
Notes:
Mechanism:
The reaction begins with the oxygen of the amide
attacking phosphorus (through a resonance form) forming an O–P bond (Step 1,
arrows A, B, and C). After a proton transfer (Step 2, arrows D and E) a lone
pair from nitrogen forms a new C–N bond, expelling oxygen (Step 3, arrows F and
G). Finally the nitrogen is deprotonated (Step 4, arrows H and I) to give the
neutral nitrile.
Notes:
There are certainly other reasonable ways to draw
proton transfer (Step 2) as well as other bases to use for deprotonation (Step
4) besides phosphate. This is just one reasonable possibility.
It’s also reasonable to show fragmentation of the
P–O–P bond in step 3, although for simplicity’s sake this was not drawn.
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