1,8-Bis(dimethylamino)naphthalene


1,8-Bisnaphthalene is an organic compound with the formula CH. It is classified as a peri-naphthalene, i.e. a 1,8-disubstituted derivative of naphthalene. Owing to its unusual structure, it exhibits exceptional basicity. It is often referred by the trade name Proton Sponge, a trademark of Sigma-Aldrich.

Structure and properties

This compound is a diamine in which the two dimethylamino groups are attached on the same side of a naphthalene ring. This molecule has several very interesting properties; one is its very high basicity; another is its spectroscopic properties.
With a pK of 12.34 for its conjugate acid in aqueous solution, 1,8-bisnaphthalene is one of the strongest organic bases. However, it only absorbs protons slowly—hence the trade name. The high basicity is attributed to the relief of strain upon protonation and/or the strong interaction between the nitrogen lone pairs. Additionally, although many aromatic amines such as aniline show reduced basicity, this is not possible in this molecule, as the nitrogens' methyl groups prevent its substituents from adopting a planar geometry, as this would require forcing methyl groups from each nitrogen atom into one another - thus the basicity is not reduced by this factor which is found in other molecules. It is sterically hindered, making it a weak nucleophile. Because of this combination of properties, it has been used in organic synthesis as a highly selective non-nucleophilic base.
Proton sponge also exhibits a very high affinity for boron, and is capable of displacing hydride from borane to form a boronium–borohydride ion pair.

Preparation

This compound is commercially available. It may be prepared by the methylation of 1,8-diaminonaphthalene with iodomethane or dimethyl sulfate.

Related compounds

Other proton sponges

Second generation proton sponges are known with even higher basicity. 1,8-bisnaphthalene or HMPN is prepared from 1,8-diaminonaphthalene by reaction with trisbromophosphonium bromide in the presence of triethylamine. HMPN has a pK of 29.9 in acetonitrile which is more than 11 orders of magnitude higher than Proton Sponge.

Hydride sponge

The chemical inverse of a proton sponge would be a hydride sponge. This property is exhibited by CH, which reacts with potassium hydride to afford K.