This article is about chemical reactions in which ammonia is a reactant. For chemical reactions involving amines, see aminolysis.
In chemistry, ammonolysis (/am·mo·nol·y·sis/) is the process of splitting ammonia into .[1] Ammonolysis reactions can be conducted with organic compounds to produce amines (molecules containing a nitrogen atom with a lone pair, :N),[2] or with inorganic compounds to produce nitrides.[3][4] This reaction is analogous to hydrolysis in which water molecules are split. Similar to water, liquid ammonia also undergoes auto-ionization, ,[5] where the rate constant is k = 1.9 × 10−38.[6]
Organic compounds such as alkyl halides, hydroxyls (hydroxyl nitriles and carbohydrates), carbonyl (aldehydes/ketones/esters/alcohols), and sulfur (sulfonyl derivatives) can all undergo ammonolysis in liquid ammonia.[5]
Organic synthesis
Mechanism: Ammonolysis of Esters
This mechanism[7] is similar to the hydrolysis of esters, the ammonia attacks the electrophilic carbonyl carbon forming a tetrahedral intermediate. The reformation of the C-O double bond ejects the ester. The alkoxide deprotonates the ammonia forming an alcohol and amide as products.[8]
Ammonolysis of esters
Of haloalkanes
On heating a haloalkane and concentrated ammonia in a sealed tube with ethanol, a series of amines are formed along with their salts.[9][10] The tertiary amine is usually the major product.[11]
The reaction between a ketone and ammonia results in an imine and byproduct water. This reaction is water sensitive and thus drying agents such as aluminum chloride or a Dean–Stark apparatus must be employed to remove water. The resulting imine will react and decompose back into the ketone and the ammonia when in the presence of water. This is due to the fact that this reaction is reversible:[14]