Phosphoramides. Part 9. An attempt to describe the mechanism in the reaction of benzyl alcohols with hexamethylphosphoric triamide
Abstract
The reactions of p-methoxybenzyl alcohol, m-nitrobenzyl alcohol, and diphenylmethanol with hexamethyl-phosphoric triamide (HMPT) at 190–210 °C to form NN-dimethylbenzylamines were followed by quantitative 13C n.m.r. spectroscopy and were found to be autocatalysed. A competition experiment between m-nitrobenzyl alcohol and diphenylmethanol with HMPT, and the observed quenching of the reaction by addition of NaOAc to the reaction mixture, indicated the metaphosphate anion as a reactive intermediate. Mono- and bis-p-methoxy-benzyl phosphates, which were believed to be formed from the corresponding alcohol and metaphosphate, were detected in the 13C and 31P spectra of the reaction mixture. The intermediately formed benzyl phosphates were believed to undergo an SN1 or an SN2 substitution reaction with dimethylamine present in the reaction mixture yielding the NN-dimethylbenzylamines.