I don't see why you wouldn't have conjugation. It seems reasonable to me to think that the tertiary amine would be sp2[/sub] hybridized.
I think so too. The catch is that my book (Clayden's; turn to page 202 if you have the book
) says that the N at the tertiary amine is sp
3 hybridized.
I guess I should reproduce the exact phrasing:
An amidine has 2 nitrogen atoms that could be protonated - one that is sp3 hybridized, the other sp2 hybridized. We might expect the sp3 nitrogen to be more basic but protonation occurs at the sp2 nitrogen atom. This happens because we have the situation as with an amide: only if we protonate on the sp2 nitrogen can the positive charge be delocalized over both nitrogens.
I agree the N at the =NR2 group has to be protonated in order to delocalize the positive charge. I only have a problem with the author claiming that the N at the tertiary amine is sp
3 hybridized, when it should be sp
2 hybridized if we agree there is conjugation in the amidine molecule.
Hmm, so who is right? Us (I would think so) or the book? Haha. Thanks Yggdrasil.