Why are imines important?

1 Answer
Feb 11, 2017

Because imine formation represents C-N bond formation.........

Explanation:

From your organic chemistry course, you know that there relatively few ways to make C-C and C-N and C-"heteroatom" bonds in general. Of course, we may represent the formation of imines by the reaction:

"Imine formation:"

R_1C(=O)R_2 + R_3NH_2 rarr R_1C(=NR_3)R_2 + H_2O

These reactions are reasonably simple to accomplish by various (and straightforward) means. The fact that the reaction spits out water (i.e. it is a condensation reaction) provides a thermodynamic driving force to the reaction. And thus we have formed a carbon-heteroatom bond (of course, here, the bond is unsaturated). In the best circumstances we may reduce the imine function to give secondary amines.

"Imine reduction:"

R_1C(=NR_3)R_2 + H^(-) rarr R_1C(H)(NR_3)R_2

The hydride transfer reagent may by LiAlH_4 or KBEt_3H or even H_2 with transition metal catalysis.

Sometimes, this can be done with stereocontrol; of course we'd need a special hydride transfer agent, likely a chiral transition metal complex under dihydrogen.