Amines

By James Ashenhurst

The Hofmann and Curtius Rearrangements

Last updated: September 21st, 2022 |

Here’s the thing about the coverage of “amines” in Org 2: there’s no narrative.

Unlike most chapters, it doesn’t start with a set of concepts and then build up to a series of examples you can then apply those concepts to.

No. A typical chapter on amines in an introductory textbook is essentially just a hodge-podge of seemingly random topics thrown together that didn’t fit anywhere else. The only unifying thread is that they contain nitrogen in some way.

Case in point: today’s random amine post is about the Hofmann and Curtius rearrangements.

summary of the hoffman and curtius rearrangements intermediate isocyanate

What prompts this, you might ask? No good answer. Most courses cover them at some point, and they’ve got to fit in somewhere. So what the hell. Why not now?

Table of Contents

  1. The Hofmann and Curtius Rearrangements
  2. The Mechanism of the Hofmann and Curtius Rearrangements, Part One – Setting Up The Rearrangement
  3. Part Two: The Key Rearrangement Step In The Hofmann And Curtius Rearrangements
  4. Part Three: Formation of the Isocyanate
  5. Putting The Steps Together
  6. The Fate of the Isocyanate: Formation of Carbamates, Amines, And Ureas
  7. Summary: The Hofmann and Curtius Rearrangements
  8. Notes
  9. (Advanced) References and Further Reading

1. The Hofmann and Curtius Rearrangements

The Hofmann and Curtius rearrangements are two examples of a whole family of rearrangement reactions that share a common mechanistic step. [as do the Beckmann and Wolff rearrangements – see bonus topic 2]

In the Hofmann rearrangement, an amide is treated with bromine and base (usually NaOH or KOH). Upon heating, an intermediate isocyanate is formed, which is not isolated. In the presence of water, the isocyanate loses carbon dioxide  (“decarboxylates”) to give an amine.

The key bond that forms in the Hofmann is the C2–N bond. Note how the carbonyl group (C1) is lost, forming carbon dioxide (CO2).  (note: this isn’t IUPAC numbering, just numbering to facilitate discussion)

example of the hofmann elimination of amides with bromine and base

In the Curtius rearrangement, an acyl azide is heated, and an isocyanate is formed. In the Curtius, the isocyanate can be isolated, but is usually transformed further into other species such a carbamate, a urea, or (via decarboxylation, as in the Hofmann) to an amine (more on those below).

example of the curtius rearrangement

The key observation to note in both cases is that the C1-C2 bond has broken, and a new C2-N bond has formed.

The question is HOW?

2. The Mechanism of the Hofmann and Curtius Rearrangements, Part 1: Setting Up The Rearrangement

There are four important parts to the mechanism of the Curtius and Hofmann rearrangements, and we’re going to walk through them all.

  1. Prelude (straightforward)
  2. The key migration step (tricky, but less tricky if you realize you’ve seen a variant of it in Org 1 !
  3. Formation of the isocyanate (straightforward)

[interlude:  steps 2 and 3 actually happen at the same time, so we’ll show how to put them together]

4. Epilogue: Transformations of the isocyanate

Part 1: Prelude

  • The Hofmann rearrangement occurs with an amide.
  • The Curtius rearrangement occurs with an acyl azide.

Both are conveniently prepared from acyl halides through an addition-elimination reaction. If you’re covering amines now, then carbonyl reactions are likely familiar territory. The acyl halides can be prepared from carboxylic acids through using a reagent like thionyl chloride (SOCl2) or phosphorus pentachloride (PCl5).

formation of amides and acyl azides

Setting up the Hofmann

In the Hofmann rearrangment, the amide is treated with bromine (Br2) and a base such as NaOH. This results in the breakage of N-H and the formation of N-Br, resulting in the installation of a good leaving group on the nitrogen. We call this an “N-bromo amide”.

hofmann rearrangement formation of the n bromo amide

The Curtius needs no “setting up”, as the acyl azide already has a splendid built-in leaving group: N2.  This is why organic azides should be treated with care, as rough treatment can lead to explosions.

3. The Key Rearrangement Step In The Hofmann and Curtius 

Now we get down to business.

The key step in the Hofmann and Curtius rearrangments is migration of a carbon atom to displace a leaving group on an adjacent nitrogen.

This requires two curved arrows to draw, which are shown in the structure on the far left (below).

  • In the first curved arrow, the C-C bond breaks, and a new C-N bond forms.
  • In the second curved arrow, the N–LG (leaving group) bond breaks.

However, it isn’t always easy to go directly from the structure on the far left  to the structure on the far right (which is drawn nice and tidy! ).

Countless points are needlessly lost in exams every year by students who get the curved arrows right but end up drawing the wrong structure! That’s why I encourage students to draw an “ugly version” first, which looks like crap but at least has all the bonds in the right place. There’s always time to redraw it and make it look pretty later.

key migration step in the hofmann and curtius rearrangements

At first this rearrangement probably looks… odd.  But it’s actually a reaction you’ve seen before! (but in disguised form).

Anyone remember the mechanism for the “oxidation” step in hydroboration-oxidation?

It’s basically the same thing! 

Here’s a refresher:

key migration step in the hydroboration reaction
Just another example of how things you learn in an earlier part of organic chemistry can come back in a later part of the course!  

Let’s visit the specific rearrangement step in the Hofmann and Curtius rearrangements with concrete examples.

Here’s the key step in the Hofmann, where heating results in breakage of C-C , formation of C-N, and breakage of N-Br.

specific example of hofmann rearrangement key step

If you follow all the arrows, you should end up with a weird-looking carbocation (above right) which we’ll deal with in a minute.

In the Curtius, heating the acyl azide results in rearrangement. The leaving group is nitrogen gas (N2).

example of the key step in the curtius rearrangement

(A subtle difference between the Curtius and the Hofmann is that there is no hydrogen attached to N in the Curtius, so we end up with a negative charge on the nitrogen in the rearranged species.)

4. Formation of the Isocyanate

The next step is going from our rearranged species to the isocyanate. For anyone accustomed to drawing resonance forms, this shouldn’t be too difficult.

(As we’ll discuss below, studies have determined that isocyanate formation occurs at the same time as migration. But for our teaching purposes, I think it helps to treat this step in isolation. We can put it all together in a minute). 

As you might recall from waayyyy back in Org 1, a resonance form with full octets is superior to one without (quick review). Our weird-looking product from rearrangement has a carbocation adjacent to a nitrogen containing a lone pair. So the first step is to draw the formation of a new C-N pi bond. This is essentially just a resonance form.

The Hofmann rearrangement occurs in the presence of base. So after drawing the resonance form,  the next step is deprotonation of the N–H bond giving the neutral isocyanate.

isocyanate formation in the hofmann rearrangement

There’s no hydrogen on the nitrogen in the Curtius. So isocyanate formation is achieved merely by donation of a lone pair from nitrogen to the carbocation. You can just look at it as drawing a resonance form.

isocyanate formation in the curtius rearrangement

5. Putting The Steps Together

Studies into the mechanism of the Hofmann and Curtius rearrangements have determined that these two steps do not happen sequentially; they actually happen at the same time! (how do we know this? see Note 1 )

That is, the migration happens at the same time as isocyanate formation. 

We need to redraw the mechanisms of the Hofmann and Curtius to reflect that, incorporating both steps.

Here’s the Hofmann (note that the deprotonation event is actually separate).

hofmann elimination both steps together

And the Curtius:

curtius rearrangement-concerted mechanism

6. The Fate Of The Isocyanate

Both the Hofmann and Curtius give rise to an isocyanate. You likely haven’t encountered isocyanates before. At first glance, they are pretty strange-looking species, but their chemistry is not so different from that of other carbonyl species such as esters, amides, and acyl halides.

The isocyanate structure closely resembles that of carbon dioxide, CO2. The carbon is pi-bonded to two strongly electronegative atoms. This makes the carbon an excellent electrophile.

By adding various nucleophiles, isocyanates can be transformed into other useful species.

• Adding an alcohol results in formation of a carbamate
• Adding an amine results in a urea
• Adding water results in a carbamic acid, which is unstable. Carbamic acids quickly lose carbon dioxide to give an amine.

transformations of isocyanates

In particular, the decarboxylation pathway presents a nifty way to make amines. We’ve learned tons of ways to make carboxylic acids, but not too many ways of making amines (besides nucleophilic substitution and reductive amination). The Hofmann is a good trick to have in your back pocket in situations where neither of those situations might apply – like making substituted anilines, for example.

Mechanisms?  See Note 2.

7. Summary: The Hofmann and Curtius Rearrangements

The mechanism of these rearrangments is tricky at first glance, but is made considerably easier once you realize that you’ve seen a variant of the migration reaction before (i.e. in hydroboration-oxidation).

I highly recommend drawing the ugly version first, because it will help you focus on seeing the bonds that form and break, before trying to redraw it into a more aesthetically appealing structure. This also goes for the Beckmann and Wolff rearrangements, which have a similar step.(see below)


Notes

Note 1. Concerted or separate steps?

If the Curtius was stepwise, the loss of nitrogen would lead to a nitrene. Nitrenes undergo a host of interesting reactions, such as insertion into C-H bonds (!). So one can design an experiment to test this: if one tries the following Curtius rearrangement, one could look for evidence of formation of a five-membered ring.

does key step in curtius rearrangement involve nitrene the answer is no because no c-h insertion

The absence of such products, along with other evidence, points to a concerted mechanism.

Note 2.  Isocyanates

The most important mechanism of isocyanates is electrophilic addition (i.e. adding a nucleophile to the central, electrophilic carbon). In the mechanism below I showed the nucleophile adding to the carbon so as to form an anion on the nitrogen, although this is is likely not the best resonance form (the oxygen is better at stabilizing negative charge than is nitrogen). Proton transfer from oxygen to nitrogen results in a neutral species. (I used the Magic Wand of Proton Transfer here, because it’s faster).

Note that the decarboxylation step in 1) doesn’t need to be preceded by deportation of the oxygen, although it definitely needs to occur such that nitrogen is protonated during the step (you don’t want to form a strongly basic amide ion, for instance).

fate of isocyanate in hofmann and curtius rearrangement formation of urea amine carbamate mechanisms

Note 3. The Beckmann, Wolff, and other rearrangements share a similar step

But wait, there’s more!

There’s a 1,2-shift with loss of a leaving group in the Beckmann rearrangement. The key step is essentially the same as we saw in the Hofmann and Curtius.

key step in beckmann rearrangement is similar to hofmann and curtius

And in the Wolff rearrangement, which is commonly also covered, you might also recognize the same key step.

key step in wolff rearrangement

And that’s not all! There’s a reaction called the Schmidt rearrangement, which is like the Curtius, but comes from adding HN3 to an acyl chloride (or carboxylic acid). And there’s another one called the Lossen rearrangement that occurs with hydroxyamic acids. No prizes for guessing the key step in those two processes. And we haven’t even mentioned the Baeyer-Villiger, which doesn’t involve nitrogen, but is pretty much the same type of process.

When I learned the hydroboration-oxidation step in Org 1, many moons ago, I certainly never expected that I would see the same reaction pattern repeat itself in so many different guises.

The bottom line is that there are a lot of reactions that go by different names that proceed through the same mechanistic process. This highlights the importance of learning the key patterns in organic chemistry, because they sure do repeat themselves a lot.


(Advanced) References and Further Reading

  1. Ueber die Einwirkung des Broms in alkalischer Lösung auf Amide
    W. Hofmann
    Chem. Ber. 1881, 14, 2725-2736
    DOI: 10.1002/cber.188101402242
    Original paper by A. W. Hofmann (who was a very productive chemist and has his name attributed to many other transformations) on the degradation of amides to primary amines.
  2. A Mild and Efficient Modified Hofmann Rearrangement
    Xicai Huang, Mehran Seid, and Jeffrey W. Keillor
    The Journal of Organic Chemistry 1997, 62 (21), 7495-7496
    DOI:10.1021/jo9708553
    This is a modified Hofmann Rearrangement carried out in methanol – in this case, the intermediate carbamic acid can react with the methanol solvent to produce methyl carbamates in good yield.
  3. METHYL CARBAMATE FORMATION VIA MODIFIED HOFMANN REARRANGEMENT REACTIONS: METHYL N-(p-METHOXYPHENYL)CARBAMATE
    Jeffrey W. Keillor and Xicai Huang
    Org. Synth. 2002, 78, 234
    DOI: 10.15227/orgsyn.078.0234
    A reliable and independently tested procedure for the modified Hofmann Rearrangement in Ref #2.
  4. The Hofmann Reaction
    Wallis, Everett L.; Lane, John F.
    Org. React. 1946, 3, 267-306
    DOI: 10.1002/0471264180.or003.07
    An old but comprehensive (for its time) review on the Hofmann reaction (the amide to amine reaction, not to be confused with his other reactions).
  5. Notes – A Re-examination of the Limitations of the Hofmann Reaction
    Ernest Magnien and Richard Baltzly
    The Journal of Organic Chemistry 1958, 23 (12), 2029-2032
    DOI:10.1021/jo01106a630
    This is an interesting paper where the authors have attempted to extend the scope of the Hofmann rearrangement beyond what was described in the original paper by carefully adjusting the reaction conditions.
  6.  20. Hydrazide und Azide organischer Säuren
    Curtius, T. I. Abhandlung.
    Journal Für Praktische Chemie, 50(1), 275–294. (1894).
    DOI: 1002/prac.18940500125
  7.  Ueber Stickstoffwasserstoffsäure (Azoimid) N3H.
    Curtius, T.
    Berichte Der Deutschen Chemischen Gesellschaft, 23(2), 3023–3033.(1890).
    DOI: 1002/cber.189002302232
    First papers by Theodore Curtius describing the reactivity of acyl hyrazides and acyl azides.
  8. The Curtius Reaction
    Smith, P. A. S.
    Org. React. 1946, 3, 336
    DOI: 10.1002/0471264180.or003.09
    An old but comprehensive review of the Curtius reaction, which includes the history of the discovery of this rearrangement, substrate scope, limitations, comparison to other similar reactions, and experimental procedures.
  9. UNDECYL ISOCYANATE
    F. H. Allen and Alan Bell
    Org. Synth. 1944, 24, 94
    DOI: 10.15227/orgsyn.024.0094
    An old but reproducible and tested procedure for synthesizing isocyanates through the Curtius Rearrangement.
  10. An Expedient Protecting-Group-Free Total Synthesis of (±)-Dievodiamine
    William P. Unsworth, Christiana Kitsiou, and Richard J. K. Taylor
    Organic Letters 2013 15 (13), 3302-3305
    DOI: 1021/ol4013469
    The first step in this total synthesis uses a Curtius rearrangement to effect an intramolecular cyclization of the indole-substituted carboxylic acid.
  11. Synthetic methods and reactions. 121. Zinc iodide catalyzed preparation of aroyl azides from aroyl chlorides and trimethylsilyl azide
    K. Surya Prakash, Pradeep S. Iyer, Massoud Arvanaghi, and George A. Olah
    The Journal of Organic Chemistry 1983 48 (19), 3358-3359
    DOI: 10.1021/jo00167a051
    A convenient procedure for preparing aromatic aryl azides from Nobel Laureate Prof. George A. Olah. These can then be used for Curtius rearrangements.

Comments

Comment section

15 thoughts on “The Hofmann and Curtius Rearrangements

    1. We don’t use NaI or NaBr for the Hofmann rearrangement because they are not electrophilic sources of halogen. We use Br2 or other sources of electrophilic Br or Cl. I am not aware of an example of using I2 or similar electrophilic I(+) reagents for doing the Hofmann but there is no reason I can see as to why it would not work, although why you’d prefer to use I versus Br I’m not sure

    1. Not sure. Heating with Br2 and KOH is usually what you’d do with an amide (Hofmann rearrangement conditions), not an acyl azide. Eventually the heat should lead to a Curtius rearrangement, but I’m not sure what the effect would be. There’s no reason to add Br2 and KOH to an acyl azide.

  1. Hi, there appears to be a “typo” in the Part 1 image for the acyl azide: the “plus” charge should be on the middle nitrogen instead of the nitrogen bonded to the oxygen? Googling “acyl azide” seems to confirm what the correct charge distribution for acyl azide looks like.

  2. Hi James,
    Thank you for sharing such a great explanation. However, I am wondering is it possible to have some change in an amide. Instead of CO-NH2 if we use CO-NHR will it result in the same rearrangement?
    Thanks in advance James, you are the best!

    1. Great question. You need a primary amide. If you try to perform it with a secondary amide you just end up replacing N-H with N-Br and it stops there, since there’s no N-H for the HO- to deprotonate and no driving force for the reaction.

  3. I’ve got a fairly benign question that I’m unable to find an answer to, but it’s burning enough that it’s still bugging me:

    In the Hofmann Rearrangement, you show the amide attacking Br2, followed by de-protonation via MOH. However, my professor showed the mechanism such that the de-protonation occurs first. The pKa’s for the acids and conjugates don’t seem to support this approach though (at least at STP). I could be missing something though, what say you? Any insight?

    Warmest regards,

    1. Hi Ben

      It’s totally possible to deprotonate the amide first and then add Br2. In fact it will be more nucleophililc than would be the neutral amide.

      The pKa of the amide is about 17, comparable to that of an alcohol, so it’s very reasonable.

      James

      1. Thanks for taking time to respond. I had it in mind that the pKa of amides was approximately 25, but it seems I wasn’t accounting for the solvent since I got this value from the Bordwell table (in DMSO).

        Warmest regards,

        Ben

  4. Ha, very true statement about there being no narrative behind coverage of amines. I tend to frame them first as nucleophilic at nitrogen (it’s all about nitrogen’s “angry” lone pair), then transition to things that happen once the nitrogen gets protonated/alkylated/”electrophile”-ated. But things get complicated after coordination of an electrophile to nitrogen, and the scope of electrophiles is broad…as these rearrangements suggest. One of the issues is that amines are readily transformed into functional groups that look very little like amines, such as isocyanates.

    I’d say the typical approach to amines is ripe for change. :-)

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