L.S.,
I have a question on the subject of amide hydrogenolysis (hydrogenation with bond cleavage) with molecular H2 towards amines.
Ketones undergo C-C cleavage, which makes sense to me as the C=O bond strength is 441 kJ/mol (for hydrogenation towards C-O) whereas the C-C bond strength is 346 (
http://www.wiredchemist.com/chemistry/data/bond_energies_lengths.html). Esters cleave into two alcohols, but I've read this is preceeded by a hemi-acetal transition state. I'm already puzzled by this as the C-O bond strenght is only 358 kJ/mol, so purely on those facts the C-O cleavage should happen prior to C=O hydrogenation.
The weirdest thing though, is that amides simply lose water. The C-N bond strenght is only 305 kJ/mol and should therefore cleave long before the C=O is hydrogenated. Even when considering the resonance structure (60% O=C-N, 40% -O-C=N+) and the C=N bond strenght of 615 (thereby C=N to C-N hydrogenation should be 310 kJ/mol), this doesn't make sense. Not even a hemi-acetamide (would that be the correct term?) could explain this phenomena as C-O 358 kJ/mol versus C-N 305 kJ/mol would still favour C-N cleavage yielding an alcohol and an amine.
Is this anomaly merely caused by the fact that the bond strenghts I use are averages, or is something else going on here?
Thank you in advance.
Regards,
Claes