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Protonation of Nitramines: Where Does the Proton Go?

Thomas SaalMartin RahmKarl O ChristeRalf Haiges
Published in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2017)
The reactions of nitramine, N-methyl nitramine, and N,N-dimethyl nitramine with anhydrous HF and the superacids HF/MF5 (M=As, Sb) were investigated at temperatures below -40 °C. In solution, exclusive O-protonation was observed by multinuclear NMR spectroscopy. Whereas no solid product could be isolated from the neat HF solutions even at -78 °C, in the HF/MF5 systems, protonated nitramine MF6- salts were isolated for the first time as moisture-sensitive solids that decompose at temperatures above -40 °C. In the solid state, depending on the counterion, O-protonated or N-protonated cations can be formed, in accord with theoretical calculations which show that the energy differences between O-protonation and N-protonation are very small. The salts [H2 N-NO2 H][AsF6 ], [H3 N-NO2 ][SbF6 ], [MeHNNO2 H][SbF6 ], and [Me2 NNO2 H][SbF6 ] were characterized by their X-ray crystal structures.
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