Hello! I was hoping to get some of your input on the following question:
There are 2 nitrogens in Tamiflu. Which is more basic and why?
I think the top nitrogen has an ether group attached to the adjacent carbon that delocalizes and induces electrons. Since oxygen is very electronegative a lone pair of nitrogen has more positive charge. On the other hand, primary nitrogen is one carbon away, farther than the ether group so it does not have as much of an effect as the first nitrogen. The lone pair on that nitrogen can accept a proton better than the first nitrogen.
The definition of a Bronsted-lowry base is it accepts an H+ proton, so the second nitrogen can accept a proton better than the first. So, it is the more basic one.