Hi,
In the ACS organic chemistry study guide, there's a question:
Arrange these compounds in the order from strongest to weakest base:
I) N2O--Ph--:NH2
II) CH3--Ph--:NH2
III) Cyclehexane--:NHCH3
where : shows an electron pair
In general, to understand which base is the stronger/strongest, I protonate each of the compounds, which adds a H to the nitrogen atom for each compound. Now, whichever compound is the most stable should be the strongest base, correct?
The book explains that the positive charge on the nitrogen cannot be delocalized in any of the conjugate acid forms. And that the base forms of I and II are resonance stabilized b/c of the aromatic ring, thus they are less basic.
Is this reasoning correct? I would think that since the aromatic ring can distribute electron density, it would stabilize the protonated forms more than the aliphatic amine would, giving them more of a "tendency" to accept a positive charge (or lose an electron pair).
Would someone kindly like to explain this to me? Am I missing something fundamental? I'd really like to understand it rather than just know it..
Thank you,
Dhruv