Can nitrogen ever have 2 bonds and 2 lone pairs, or even 1 bond and three lone pairs?
Many organic molecules I've seen either had 3 bonds and 1 lone pair or 4 bonds to nitrogen. I've not seen nitrogen with 2 bonds or 1 bond. Why is this the case?
Many organic molecules I've seen either had 3 bonds and 1 lone pair or 4 bonds to nitrogen. I've not seen nitrogen with 2 bonds or 1 bond. Why is this the case?
1 Answer
Because it's very unlikely that a nitrogen of that sort wouldn't just steal a proton from its solvent.
In the first case, a nitrogen with two bonds and two lone pairs would be
The pKa of an amine is about
Can you reason this out for