DAT Destroyer 2014 OChem Question #18

This forum made possible through the generous support of SDN members, donors, and sponsors. Thank you.
Organize your questions into one thread instead of making a new thread for every question.

Kind of hard to answer the first question without seeing a picture of the molecules.

I believe the 3 carbons attached to the Nitrogen and the + make it a quaternary amine while there is only one carbon bonded to the nitrogen in NRH2, making it a primary amine.
 
I think that you only count the R groups attached to the nitrogen when classifying it as primary secondary tertiary or quarternary.
 
We don't count the hydrogens, for example CH4 is primary, however CH3-CH2-CH3 is secondary for the 2nd carbon.
 
We don't count the hydrogens, for example CH4 is primary, however CH3-CH2-CH3 is secondary for the 2nd carbon.

CH4 is not the best example of a primary, even though by convention people may call it that. CH3CH3 however has two primary carbons.
 
Question: Which of the following is an example of a secondary amine?

How is NR3H+ a quaternary amine while NRH2 is a primary amine and not a tertiary amine?

NR3H+ would be a tertiary amine and NRH2 would be a primary amine like you said. It looks like Destroyer made an error. A quaternary amine would be NR4+
 
Top