Abstract

The rates of hydrogen-abstraction by methyl radicals from the three different sites in ethylamine have been measured by studying three isotopically different ethylamines: CH3CH2NH2, CH3CH2ND2 and CD3CH2NH2. Photolysis of azomethane over the temperature range 110–180°C has been used as the source of methyl radicals, and velocity constants have been obtained for five elementary reactions. Abstraction takes place from all three sites. The methylene group is the most reactive site in the molecule, and the methyl group the least. At 150°C, 67 % of the hydrogen comes from CH2, 29 % from NH2 and about 4 % from CH3. These results contrast with previous studies on other amines, in which the amine group has always been the most reactive. The reactivity of the amine group in ethylamine is similar to that in methylamine in possessing a somewhat lower A-factor than normal. The primary isotope effect arising on substitution of ND2 for NH2 is in accord with expectations based on zero-point-energy differences. Arrhenius parameters (based on a value of 1013.34cm3 mole–1 sec–1 for the dimerization of methyl radicals) have been determined as follows: [graphics omitted] For attack on the methyl group of ethylamine at 150°C, a value for kCH3 of 105.8cm3 mole–1 sec–1 has been estimated from the corresponding value for kCD3 of 105.1cm3 mole–1 sec–1: attack is too slight for separate values of A and E to be determined precisely.

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