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Author: Subject: Methylamine sulfate vs. methylamine HCl vs. methylamine freebase
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[*] posted on 6-7-2024 at 12:13
Methylamine sulfate vs. methylamine HCl vs. methylamine freebase


I just have a quick question about the different salts of methylamine. I'm trying to prepare a small quantity from sulfamic acid with methanol. This is a quite streight forward and easy method where the sulfamic acid reacts with the solvent methanol to form ammonium methylsulfate, which rearranges at around 230C to form methylamonium sulfate.

So my question is: since methylamine is most often encountered in the HCl form, is there any real advantage of converting it to the HCl salt from the sulfate salt? This could be done by liberating the freebase with NaOH and then bubbling the methylamine freebase gas into conc. hydrochloric acid.

But why bother to do this?

Also, what about if you want a methanol solution of freebase methylamine? Is it efficient to just slowly drip a concentrated solution of NaOH into the methylamine sulfate to liberate the freebase and then to bubble the freebase into methanol? Or will a lot of the methylamine get lost that way?

[Edited on 6-7-2024 by Monoamine]
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[*] posted on 6-7-2024 at 21:48


Maybe if you add methanolic solution of NaOH to methylamine sulfate then Na2SO4 crystallizes out due to low solubility in methanol? Just from my head, should be tried practically. If that works then no need to work with gaseous freebase.
solubility of anhydrous Na2SO4 in methanol: http://chemister.ru/Databases/Chemdatabase/properties-en.php...
g / 100 g solvent
methanol: 0.01 (10°C)
methanol: 0.017 (20°C)
methanol: 0.018 (30°C)
methanol: 0.02 (40°C)
methanol: 0.019 (50°C)

But at first you need to purify methylamine sulfate. It seems to be quite impure when obtaining it by heating ammonium methyl sulfate at 250-280 C, see the video between 7 and 10 minute, they distilled out the amine anyway:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EtQOgDY6wdQ

It would be nice to know a solvent for purifying / recrystallization of methylamine sulfate. For hydrochloride they used absolute ethanol in first round and then 1-butanol, see the "note 4" here:
https://www.orgsyn.org/demo.aspx?prep=CV1P0347

Quote:
4. Since ammonium chloride is not absolutely insoluble in 100 per cent ethyl alcohol (100 g. dissolve 0.6 g. at 15°), the methylamine hydrochloride purified in the manner described contains appreciable traces of it. A purer product can be prepared by recrystallizing from n-butyl alcohol, in which the solubility of ammonium chloride even at the boiling temperature is negligibly small. Methylamine hydrochloride is somewhat less soluble in this solvent than in ethyl alcohol, but as a rule three extractions carried out at 90–100° with 4–6 parts of fresh butyl alcohol for each extraction result in a substantially complete separation. Since the last traces of the solvent are not readily removed by exposure to air, a solution of the recrystallized material in a small quantity of water should be distilled until free of alcohol, and allowed to crystallize.
An entirely different method for preparing pure methylamine hydrochloride free of ammonium chloride has been described.1 It is based on the fact that when a mixture of methylamine and ammonia reacts with an insufficient quantity of hydrochloric acid the methylamine is preferentially neutralized and the ammonia left free.


Personally I would use Soxhlet extractor instead of 3 extractions.
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[*] posted on 6-7-2024 at 21:59


Thanks for the reply Fery. This is very interesting. Especially the comment at the end about methylamine prefferably being neutralized by HCl than ammonia. So maybe having a series of wash bottles with HCl through which the gas is passed will create several "fractions", where the first fraction will be the most pure methylammonium chloride and the last fraction will contain the most ammonium chloride.

Still, I only expect a lot of ammonium in there if the rearrangement of ammonium methylsulfate to methylammonium sulfate is inefficient.
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[*] posted on 6-7-2024 at 22:49


I found this, they prepared methylamine that way and added (NH4)2SO4 during heating to reduce dimethyl and thimethyl side reactions
https://www.tesble.com/10.1039/ct9201700236

Attachment: ct9201700236.pdf (661kB)
This file has been downloaded 125 times

That introduces ammonium sulfate but it could be perhaps separated by extracting methylamine sulfate using Soxhlet and methanol as (NH4)2SO4 is insoluble in methanol. I did not find solubility of methylamine sulfate in methanol.
http://chemister.ru/Databases/Chemdatabase/properties-en.php...
1:1 molar mixture of ammonium methyl sulfate : (NH4)2SO4 was able to still melt completely, but twice amount of (NH4)2SO4 already left undissolved (NH4)2SO4
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[*] posted on 7-7-2024 at 19:31


The reasons of converting methylamine from the freebase would be storage problems.
Methylamine freebase is a gas so storage is rather difficult like this.
One can bubble methylamine gas into icecold methanol and store it like a methanolic solution of say something like 40%.
Or convert it to the HCL salt, this is the way it´s often sold.
But methylamine HCL is very hydroscopic and picks up moisture from the air very quickly so one needs to be quick or find a good procedure.
The sulfate salt i have never seen, maybe there is a reason for this.
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[*] posted on 8-7-2024 at 01:32


Why would you want to convert methylamine to a salt? I have methylamine 40% in water. It stores perfectly well in a glass bottle with a decent cap. It is not particularly corrosive, nor giving off fumes through the cap. You just need a bottle with a sturdy plastic cap, which tightly closes the bottle. At 40% concentration, there is no or only minor pressurizing in the bottle, not even in summertime at 30 to 35 degrees Centigrade.

I also have methylamine HCl, but as told already, that is very hygroscopic, and my solid is somewhat humid. The crystals stick together.

I can imagine, that storing methylamine as a solution in methanol or ethanol also works fine. I never tried this myself though, I only used it in experiments in aqueous solution.




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[*] posted on 9-7-2024 at 07:50


Wow this is my 1000th anniversary post :)

So I did a quick try of the reaction between methanol and amidosulfonic acid into ammonium methyl sulfate.
97,1 g of amidosulfonic acid (1 mol) with 200 ml of methanol was put into 500 ml RBF and magnetic stir bar. The methanol used contained only very little of H2O (max. 0,05%), its volume was in excess but later the volume shown to be the right amount. Reflux condenser was attached with drying tube to prevent moisture from air to enter. The reaction was heated and magnetically stirred. The reflux lasted totally 6 hours from which first 3 hours the stirring was impossible and only after 3 hours when substantial amount of sulfamic acid reacted the stir bar started to rotate finally.
After 6 hours of reflux (from which 5 and half hours there were visible crystals and only last 30 minutes the content was fully dissolved) the heating was stopped and the content was allowed to cool down to room temperature. The solution stayed clear due to its supersaturation. Only after vigorous stirring for few minutes the supersaturated solution crystallized quickly. The condenser was detached, flask was stoppered and put into a fridge to +4 C overnight.
Crystals were filtered on sinter, dried for a while on sinter using suction (it was necessary to press them into about half of their volume using the reversed side of a stopper, also take in account they are hygroscopic so do not suck them for too long) and then further dried in a desiccator over anhydrous CaCl2. Crystals were very fluffy, their volume was about 200 ml when scraping them from sintered funnel.
Mother liquor was put back into 500 ml RBF and 100 ml of methanol was distilled out. The same crystallization process was repeated and the crystals (cca 3 times less than the main crop) were added to the main crop and dried in desiccator. From the second filtration the volume of mother liquor was 30 ml so approximately 50 ml of methanol was lost during vacuum filtration + adhering on the crystals or maybe forming some adduct. The product was hygroscopic which was visible on their remainders when cleaning the glass.
All the excess of methanol could be just distilled out instead of crystallization but then you have to quickly pour out the product from the distillation flask to a dish with aluminium foil while it is still hot before it solidifies (see the ChemPlayer video).



methanol, very low water content (max 0,05%)

IMG_20240707_075857_5.jpg - 71kB



amidosulfonic acid (if using not much pure acid especially with insoluble impurities then very likely no supersaturated solution obtained)

IMG_20240707_075948_7.jpg - 68kB



reflux, a lot of acid on the bottom of flask which denied stir bar to rotate for half of the reaction time

IMG_20240707_082552_3.jpg - 67kB



after 3 hours of reflux a lot of amidosulfonic acid reacted so the stir bar started to rotate finally

IMG_20240707_120629_5.jpg - 46kB



after 5 hours of reflux there was still a little of undissolved amidosulfonic acid, it completely dissolved after further 30 minutes and the reflux was done for 6 hours totally

IMG_20240707_140244_0.jpg - 67kB



vacuum filtration of the product

IMG_20240708_143604_9.jpg - 45kB



distilling out 100 ml of methanol from the mother liquor (stirring stopped for a short time just to make a photo)

IMG_20240708_155033_6.jpg - 73kB



second crop of the product

IMG_20240709_162936_1.jpg - 59kB



crystals were quite fluffy and hygroscopic

IMG_20240709_161702_2.jpg - 76kB



references:
https://www.bitchute.com/video/Ian9ZMFBM3bL/
https://seed131.bitchute.com/2vWmMgSEZ2jf/Ian9ZMFBM3bL.mp4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zU9qJRfISIk

methylamine from the ammonium methyl sulfate:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EtQOgDY6wdQ
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[*] posted on 23-7-2024 at 21:13


Thank you for this detailed report of your experiment Fery! It looks like you got some very nice crystals out in the end! I would imagine that most of the crystals you have there are ammonium methylsulfate.

To get methylamine sulfate you would now have to heat these crystals of ammonium methylsulfate to about 270C and hold the temperature there for about 15 minutes. But be very very careful that the temperature does not rise above 270C or your product will quickly charr and burn (happened to me on the first try). So heat it very slowly. According to this paper,

https://sciencemadness.org/scipics/CT9140502762.pdf

that will convert about 98% of the ammonium methylsulfate to methylmmonium sulfate.

I tried this with my product and got a highly hygroscopic product out. So then I dripped a conc. solution of NaOH into it and bubbled it into a HCl solution to make methylammonium chloride.

Still have to purif that though, let's see if it worked, but it certainly smelled like methylamine. ;)
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[*] posted on 26-7-2024 at 09:19


Monoamine - the yield after 14 days of drying in desiccator at atmospheric pressure over anhydrous CaCl2 was 113,1 g (88%, M=129.14 g/mol). The mother liquor could be very likely further reduced in volume by boiling and more product obtained. Good that the weight of the product was more than the weight of reactant amidosulfonic acid so there is molar mass increase and the product can not be the amidosulfonic acid. Methanolic solution of the product is prone to supersaturation and the first crystallization was difficult. For subsequent crystallizations it is trivial to add 1 crystal of already available product into cold solution to initialize the process.
Formerly dry granules of CaCl2 visibly absorbed some liquid (acquired glazy surface and some liquid was visible at the bottom of desiccator), I assume mostly remainders of methanol and some water from air moisture acquired while vacuum filtering and passing some air through the product.
Quickly transferring the product into plastic bottle after opening the desiccator did not change the product significantly, the product is still dry fluffy crystalline mass (of volume almost circa 200 ml) and not in one block after 1 week. But leaving the dish on air for 10 minutes (before going to wash it) - the dusty remainders of the product adhering to dish walls changed into microdroplets - product is a little hygroscopic, but not so much as methylamine hydrochloride.
Heating the ammonium methylsulfate produces methylamine HYDROGENsulfate.
NH2-SO2-OH + CH3OH -> NH4SO4CH3
NH4SO4CH3 -> NH3CH3.HSO4
In the literature I posted previously they suggest heating 1:1 molar mixture of ammonium methylsulfate with ammonium sulfate (or even more ammonium sulfate, they tried also double molar ratio) to reduce side reaction into dimethylamine. Also the byproduced dimethylamine salt could be partially converted into monoamine salt by heating the dimethylamine salt with ammonium sulfate.
The produced methylamine hydrogensulfate could be very likely neutralized by mixing with solid ammonium carbonate or hydrogencarobonate while extracting with commercial isopropanol which is almost anhydrous (unlike common denatured 95% ethanol). 1-butanol is also recommended, but IPA is more available and cheaper. That's for methylamine hydrochloride, I suppose sulfate would dissolve just somewhat less, but hydrogensulfate could be probably very soluble. That's why I suppose the necessity to neutralize methylamine hydrogensulfate with ammonium carbonate. These are just my theoretical deductions, I didn't try it practically yet. I just would like to find a way to avoid wasting NaOH as well HCl by producing methylamine sulfate salt instead of hydrogenchloride salt and avoiding working with gaseous methylamine. Methylamine b.p. is -6 C so maybe it could be condensed into liquid when working in freezing winter time (wasting only NaOH by freebasing the methylamine and avoiding wasting HCl)... and then just dissolving in anhydrous methanol in concentrations like 40% and then stored at room temperature. I just like economic routes, avoid wasting unnecessary chemicals and reducing unnecessary preparational steps.
Read this excellent post by Organicum which concerns methylamine hydrogenchloride:
https://www.sciencemadness.org/talk/viewthread.php?tid=1261#...

[Edited on 26-7-2024 by Fery]
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[*] posted on 30-7-2024 at 07:12


Could someone explain me why this trustworthy EU supplier sells the compound discussed here? I thought that it is on precursor watched list. Or is it only listed precursor in USA and not in EU? It is so cheap that it is economical nonsense to synthesize it at home. 1 kg for 55 EUR.
https://shop.es-drei.de/amine/314/methylamin-hydrochlorid-me...
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[*] posted on 29-8-2024 at 06:58


Its used in some drug related chemistry so its a bit regulated in some places.
But it is such a commonly used chemical that is used for a lot of stuff and here in Europe is can be bought without any regulations as far as i know.

But EU regulations gets changed for the worse all the time, soon you need to fill out a form to get salt at the food store.
And its not allways to restrict dangerous chemicals, its often just because they want to find more ways to profit and take more money from your wallet.
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[*] posted on 29-8-2024 at 23:15


I doubt that methylamine is regulated here. I know multiple sellers, who sell either methylammonium chloride, or methylamine, or both.

S3 (in EU)
Laboratoriumdiscounter (in EU)
Labstuff (in NL)

If you look a little further, I'm quite sure there are more sellers, where this can be purchased.




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[*] posted on 30-8-2024 at 13:35


Lucky. In the US, even university labs have to fill out DEA paperwork explaining why they need it. I think there's a limited order quantity as well, but that's not an issue for the scale we work on in my lab. A couple hundred grams lasts a good while.



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[*] posted on 31-8-2024 at 13:46


Outside the USA, methylamine is on the INCB's Limited International Special Surveillance list.

In practical terms, this means methylamine is technically legal, but vendors in western Europe and other areas with a strong litigation culture are likely to be very cautious about selling it to individuals, due to potential liability issues.

I suspect that it's much more widely available from vendors in eastern Europe, as are hazardous/otherwise contentious substances in general; from past experience, I've found they generally take the more old-fashioned view that if they sell it to you, it's your responsibility to use it properly.

[Edited on 31-8-2024 by Lionel Spanner]

[Edited on 31-8-2024 by Lionel Spanner]




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[*] posted on 3-9-2024 at 15:51


I was driving through West Virginia (USA) the other day and got behind a large tanker truck, and noticed it looke different than most I have seen for liquid nitrogen or such, and say a sign on it that stated "Anhydrous monomethylamine" on it. Looked to be aboiut 5000-10,000 gallons of it. That would make for a smally mess if it wrecked. My next thought was how to siphon some out while it was moving, ala Breaking Bad. But I did not even have any extra barrels in the car...
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