what is the reaction of HF with Triethyl amine in detail?
[Edited on 17-2-2012 by ScienceSquirrel]simba - 10-2-2012 at 09:50
HF forms a fluroride salt with triethylamine. Acids form salts with amines.BromicAcid - 10-2-2012 at 10:43
Not that easy, triethylamine forms a number of salts with hydrogen fluoride, the most common of which that I run across is not the
(CH<sub>2</sub>CH<sub>3</sub><sub>3</sub>N*HF
that you would expect but the trihydrofluoride salt (CH<sub>2</sub>CH<sub>3</sub><sub>3</sub>N*3HF which is commonly used in fluorinations or as a catalyst in fluorinations. As for the
detailed mechanism, not sure. Hexavalent - 10-2-2012 at 16:17
Should this not be in Beginnings?ScienceSquirrel - 10-2-2012 at 16:37
Honestly yes.
Hydrogen fluoride forms strong hydrogen bonds so it is to be expected that species like (Et)3N.3HF are formed.Hexavalent - 17-2-2012 at 03:41
Also, I would suggest adding a more descriptive title in the future . . .arsphenamine - 17-2-2012 at 17:20
Semi-empirical methods (MOPAC, PM6) are extremely sensitive to the starting geometry, and no use other than for generating an input for ab initio
methods.
Successively refined ab initio comps produce a geometry you'd expect if you focused on the H-bonds, but (perhaps fortuitously) give an N-H-F bond
length of 2..586A in good accord with the 2.60A in Ilayaraja, et.al. NMR spin relaxation experimental methods.
GAMESS-US eq. geom. at the RHF/631G(2dp)** theory/basis set level were translated to Z-matrix format for Avogadro display and then exported to a .PNG
image.