Hydroxylamine is a reactive chemical with
formula
NH2OH. It can be considered a hybrid of
ammonia and
water due to parallels it shares
with each. At room temperature pure NH2OH is ordinarily a white,
unstable
crystalline,
hygroscopic
compound; however it is almost always encountered as an aqueous
solution.
Hydroxylamine tends to be
explosive, and the nature of
the hazard is not entirely understood. At least two factories
dealing in hydroxylamine have been destroyed since 1999 with loss
of life. It is known, however, that ferrous and ferric
iron salts accelerate the
decomposition of 50% NH2OH solutions. Hydroxylamine and its
derivatives are more safely handled in the form of
salts.
NH2OH is an intermediate in biological
nitrification. The
oxidation of NH3 is mediated by
hydroxylamine
oxidoreductase (HAO).
Production
NH2OH can be synthesized via several
routes:
Raschig synthesis: Aqueous
ammonium
nitrite is reduced by HSO4−/SO2 at 0°C to yield a
hydroxylamido-N,N-disulfate anion, which can be hydrolyzed to give
(NH3OH)2SO4.
-
- NH4NO2 + 2SO2 + NH3 + H2O →
[NH4]2[N(OH)(OSO2)2]
-
- [NH4]+2[N(OH)(OSO2)2]2− + H2O → [NH4][NH(OH)(OSO2)] +
[NH4][HSO4]
-
- 2[NH4]+[NH(OH)(OSO2)]− + 2H2O → [NH3(OH)]2[SO4] +
[NH4]2[SO4]
Solid NH2OH can be collected by treatment with
liquid ammonia.
Ammonium
sulfate is insoluble in liquid ammonia and is removed by
filtration; the liquid
ammonia is evaporated to give
the desired product.
-
- NH2OH (Zn/HCl) → NH3
- R-NHOH (Zn/HCl) → R-NH2
Uses
Hydroxylamine and its salts are commonly used as
reducing agents in a myriad of organic and inorganic reactions.
They can also act as antioxidants for fatty acids. Some
non-chemical uses include removal of hair from animal hides and
photography developing solutions.
The nitrate salt,
hydroxylammonium
nitrate, is being researched as a rocket propellant, both in
water solution as a
monopropellant and in its
solid form as a
solid
propellant.
This has also been used in the past by biologists
to introduce random mutations by switching base pairs from A to G,
or from C to T. This is to probe functional areas of genes to
elucidate what happens if their functions are broken. Nowadays
other mutagens are used. Hydroxylamine can also be used to highly
selectively cleave
asparaginyl-
glycine peptide bonds in
peptides and proteins. It also bonds to and permanently disables
(poisons)
heme-containing
enzymes. It is used as an irreversible inhibitor of the
oxygen-evolving complex of photosynthesis on account of its
similar structure to water.
In the semiconductor industry, hydroxylamine is
often a component in the "resist stripper" which removes
photoresist after lithography.
Safety
Hydroxylamine may explode on heating. It is an
irritant to the respiratory tract, skin, eyes, and other mucous
membranes. It may be absorbed through the skin, is harmful if
swallowed, and is a possible mutagen.
References
-
Hydroxylamine
- Walters, Michael A. and Andrew B. Hoem. "Hydroxylamine."
e-Encyclopedia of Reagents for Organic Synthesis. 2001.
- Schupf
Computational Chemistry Lab
- M. W. Rathke A. A. Millard "Boranes in Functionalization of
Olefins to Amines: 3-Pinanamine" Organic Syntheses, Coll. Vol. 6,
p.943; Vol. 58, p.32. (preparation of hydroxylamine-O-sulfonic
acid).
External links
hydroxylamine in German: Hydroxylamin
hydroxylamine in Italian: Idrossilammina
hydroxylamine in Dutch: Hydroxylamine
hydroxylamine in Japanese: ヒドロキシルアミン
hydroxylamine in Polish: Hydroksyloamina
hydroxylamine in Portuguese: Hidroxilamina
hydroxylamine in Russian:
Гидроксиламин