Everything about Pyridine totally explained
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Pyridine is a
chemical compound with the formula
C5H5N. It is a liquid with a distinctively putrid, fishy odour. Pyridine is a simple and fundamentally important
heterocyclic aromatic organic compound. It is structurally related to
benzene, wherein one CH group in the six-membered ring is replaced by a
nitrogen atom. The pyridine ring occurs in many important compounds, including the
nicotinamides. Pyridine is sometimes used as a
ligand in
coordination chemistry. As a ligand, it's usually abbreviated "py".
Basicity
The nitrogen atom on pyridine features a basic
lone pair of
electrons. Because this lone pair isn't delocalized into the aromatic pi-system, pyridine is
basic with chemical properties similar to
tertiary amines. The
pKa of the
conjugate acid is 5.21. Pyridine is
protonated by
reaction with
acids and forms a positively charged aromatic
polyatomic ion called
pyridinium cation. The
bond lengths and
bond angles in pyridine and the pyridinium ion are almost identical because protonation doesn't disrupt the aromatic pi system.
Pyridine as a solvent
Pyridine is a widely used and versatile
solvent: it's
polar but
aprotic. It is miscible with a broad range of solvents including
hexane and
water.
Deuterated pyridine, called pyridine-
d5, is a common solvent for
1H
NMR spectroscopy.
Role in chemical synthesis
Pyridine is important in industrial chemistry, both as a fundamental building block and as a solvent and reagent in
organic synthesis. It is used as a solvent in
Knoevenagel condensations.
It is also a starting material in the synthesis of compounds used as an intermediate in making insecticides, herbicides, pharmaceuticals, food
flavorings,
dyes,
rubber chemicals,
adhesives,
paints,
explosives and
disinfectants. Pyridine is also used as a denaturant for
antifreeze mixtures, for
ethyl alcohol, for
fungicides, and as a
dyeing aid for textiles.
Preparation and occurrence
Many methods exist in industry and in the laboratory (some of them
named reactions) for the synthesis of pyridine and its derivatives: Pyridine was originally isolated industrially from crude
coal tar. It is currently
synthesized from
acetaldehyde,
formaldehyde and
ammonia, a process that involves the intermediacy of
acrolein:
» CH
2O + NH
3 + 2 CH
3CHO → C
5H
5N + 3 H
2O
By substituting other aldehydes for acetaldehyde, one obtains alkyl and aryl substituted pyridines. 26,000 tons were produced worldwide in 1989.
Organic reactions
In
organic reactions pyridine behaves both as a tertiary
amine, undergoing
protonation,
alkylation,
acylation, and
N-oxidation at nitrogen, and as an
aromatic compound, undergoing
Nucleophilic substitutions.
Pyridine is a good nucleophile with a donor number of 33.1. It is easily attacked by alkylating agents to give N-alkylpyridinium salts.
Nucleophilic aromatic substitution occurs at C2/C4. For example in the Chichibabin reaction, pyridine reacts with sodium amide to give 2-aminopyridine. In the Emmert reaction (Bruno Emmert, 1939) pyridine reacts with a ketone in presence of aluminium or magnesium and mercuric chloride to give the carbinol also at C2.
Safety and environmental
The LD50 in rats (oral) is 891 mg kg–1. It is volatile and can be absorbed through skin. Available data indicate that "exposure to pyridine in drinking-water led to reduction of sperm motility at all dose levels in mice and increased estrous cycle length at the highest dose level in rats". Currently its evaluations as a possible carcinogenic agent showed there's inadequate evidence in humans for the carcinogenicity of pyridine, albeit there's limited evidence of carcinogenic effects on animals.
Derivatives
Pyridine-borane, C5H5NBH3 (m.p. 10–11 °C) is a mild reducing agent with improved stability relative to NaBH4 in protic solvents and improved solubility in aprotic organic solvents.
Pyridine-sulfur trioxide, C5H5NSO3 (mp 175 °C) is a sulfonation agent used to convert alcohols to sulfonates, which in turn undergo C-O bond scission upon reduction with hydride agents.
Related compounds
Structurally or chemically related compounds are
DMAP is short for 4-dimethylaminopyridine
Bipyridine and viologen are simple polypyridine compounds consisting of two pyridine molecules joined by a single bond
Terpyridine, a molecule of three pyridine rings connected together by two single bonds.
Quinoline and Isoquinoline have pyridine and a benzene ring fused together.
Aniline is a benzene derivative with an attached NH2 group and NOT a pyridine
Diazines are compounds with one more carbon replaced by nitrogen such as Pyrazine and Pyramidine
Triazines are compounds with two more carbons replaced by nitrogen and a tetrazine has four nitrogen atoms
2,6-Lutidine is a trivial name for 2,6-dimethylpyridine.
Collidine is the trivial name for 2,4,6-trimethylpyridine.
Pyridinium p-toluenesulfonate (PPTS) is a salt formed by proton exchange between pyridine and p-toluenesulfonic acid
2-Chloropyridine is a toxic environmentally significant component of the breakdown of the pesticide imidacloprid.Further Information
Get more info on 'Pyridine'.
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