N-Alkylalkanolamine Derivatives for Metalworking
Transcription
N-Alkylalkanolamine Derivatives for Metalworking
Taminco: M. D. Gernon, G. Verdino; STLE 2015 1 N-Alkylalkanolamines and N-Alkylalkanolamine Derivatives for Metalworking: e.g., Tertiary NAlkylalkanolamine-N-Oxides Michael D. Gernon & Guy Verdino Taminco USA, Pace, FL Abstract: Certain alkanolamine additives used in metalworking fluids offer significant peripheral benefits in the areas of corrosion inhibition, coupling, biocide synergy, emulsification and lubricity. In addition to the alkanolamines themselves, a number of derivatives of the alkanolamines are also useful. Among the many derivatives of alkanolamines that can be easily produced, the nitrones (derived by oxidation of secondary alkanolamines) and the tertiary alkanolamine-N-oxides are particularly notable. This talk will focus on tertiary alkanolamines and derivatives like the alkanolamine-N-oxides as useful heat activated boundary lubricants, antioxidants and persistent long term fluid stabilizing additives. The properties of the N-alkylalkanolamines will be reviewed, and the preparation of certain AAA derivatives such as triethanolamine-N-oxide, N-alkyldiethanolamine-Noxides and N,N-dialkylethanolamine-N-oxides will be described. Most importantly, the utility of the Nalkylalkanoalmines and certain alkanolamine derivatives as metalworking fluid additives will be illustrated. Introduction: Tertiary amines can be oxidized at nitrogen to form tertiary amine-N-oxides.1,2,3 The oxidants employed for this reaction are almost exclusively of the peroxide type (i.e., containing an O-O bond; as in peroxides, peracids, peresters, etc.; the most commonly used oxidant is aqueous hydrogen peroxide). The basic reaction is given below: The oxidation of tertiary amines with peroxide type oxidants typically produces the corresponding amine-Noxide rapidly and in good yield. The use of molecular oxygen is far less efficient than is the use of a peroxide type oxidant, and the air oxidation of a tertiary amine typically yields a variety of products which typically includes some though not necessarily a majority of the amine-N-oxide. In contrast, the oxidation of primary amines can lead to a number of products including imines, oximes and nitro compounds. The oxidation of secondary amines is more predictable than the oxidation of primary amines but not as straightforward as is the case for tertiary amines. Secondary amines are initially oxidized to hydroxylamines which are usually immediately further oxidized to nitrones. The nitrone so formed is usually a RedOx stable molecule, but nitrones are prone to aqueous hydrolysis yielding monoalkylhydroxylamines and aldehyde. So any nitrone hydrolysis that occurs while strong oxidant is still present will result in further oxidation. Tertiary amine-N-oxides are used industrially in a number of areas. A concentrated aqueous solution of N-methylmorpholine-N-oxide (NMMO) is used as a cellulose solvent in the Lenzing Process for producing renewable textiles. Tertiary amine-N-oxides are the starting materials used in the production of radical/oxygen scavenging dialkylhydroxylamines via the Cope Elimination. Fatty amine-N-oxides are used as surfactants, and the conversion of a tertiary amine group to the corresponding N-oxide is a commonly used strategy for producing a hydrophile within an amphiphilic molecule. Certain amine-N-oxidants are the preferred Taminco: M. D. Gernon, G. Verdino; STLE 2015 2 stoichiometric oxidants for use with toxic catalytic oxidants like osmium tetroxide, and large amounts of amineN-oxides such as NMMO are used in the pharmaceutical and fine chemical intermediates industry. Certain amine-N-oxides are useful ligands for commercially important organometallic complexes, and a variety of amine-N-oxides have found use as additives in coatings, fuels, bleaches and functional fluids. Preparation and Reactions of Tertiary Amine-N-Oxides: Tertiary amine-N-oxides are usually prepared by the reaction of an equivalent of tertiary amine with an equivalent of a peroxide type oxidant. For the oxidation of water soluble tertiary amines, aqueous hydrogen peroxide is most commonly used. For the oxidation of hydrophobic tertiary amines, alternative oxidants such as peracids may be used. However, owing to the surfactant properties of the amine-N-oxides derived from hydrophobic tertiary amines, aqueous hydrogen peroxide can usually be used with them as well. The initial addition of aqueous hydrogen peroxide to the hydrophobic tertiary amine forms an emulsion, but as further aqueous hydrogen peroxide is added and a larger amount of the surface active amine-N-oxide forms; the solution becomes a clear and stable micro emulsion. The use of oxidants other than aqueous hydrogen peroxide is mostly in the realm of academic work and/or for the synthesis of small volume fine chemical intermediates. The tertiary amine-N-oxides are weak bases (pKa ≈ 5), and initially formed tertiary amine-N-oxides are sometimes converted to the ammonium form (i.e., N-hydroxyammonium compound) by the addition of an equivalent of strong acid. The N-hydroxyammonium form of a tertiary amine-N-oxide can be recrystallized, and thus acidification is oftentimes used as part of a longer purification procedure. In the commercial sector, tertiary amine-N-oxides are mostly used as produced; typically as a concentrated aqueous solution. The quintessential reaction of tertiary amine-N-oxides is the Cope Elimination. The Cope Elimination is a thermally driven β-elimination reaction that converts a tertiary amine-N-oxide into a dialkylhydroxylamine and an unsaturated compound. The reaction is illustrated for triethylamine-N-oxide (TEAO) below. Generally, the Cope Elimination is suppressed in more dilute aqueous solutions, but as the water is removed the reaction occurs more readily. Note that the formation of tertiary amine-N-oxides is exothermic, and, if the temperature of a tertiary amine oxidation is allowed to rise uncontrolled, then Cope Elimination of the amine-N-oxide may start to run concurrently with the amine oxidation; degrading the quality of the product. The typical reaction temperature for a smooth Cope Elimination is ≈ 120 oC; with significant variance possible depending on the specific tertiary amine-N-oxide and the state of hydration. Note that the dialkylhydroxylamine formed by Cope Elimination will generally react with the tertiary amine-Noxide starting material to form tertiary amine and nitrone. Thus, practical application of the Cope Elimination requires that the dialkylhydroxylamine be immediately removed from the reaction zone where tertiary amine-Noxide is present. Taminco: M. D. Gernon, G. Verdino; STLE 2015 3 The tertiary N-alkylalkanolamines (AAA’s) are ideal substrates for N-oxidation. The 2-hydroxyethyl group(s) present in tertiary AAA’s will hydrogen bond to hydrogen peroxide, and this hydrogen bonding makes the Noxidation of tertiary AAA’s especially convenient. The Cope Elimination of tertiary amine-N-oxides, on the other hand, is complicated by the fact that at least one of the possible olefinic elimination groups is an enol; and this eliminated enol will, of course, rapidly rearrange to an aldehyde. Bulk Cope Elimination reactions carried out with tertiary AAA-N-oxides are tougher to control than those with simple trialkylamine-N-oxides, and the rearrangement energy of the enol has been known to cause explosions.4 The possible products of Cope Elimination for dibutylamine-N-oxide (DBAE-N-oxide) and butyldiethanolamine-N-oxide (BDEA-N-oxide) are shown below. Tertiary AAA-N-Oxides in Metalworking: The tertiary AAA-N-oxides produced from selected AAA’s with intermediate length alkyl groups (C4 being ideal) are particularly useful as additives in metalworking fluids. Longer chain alkyl groups lead to excessive surface activity and foaming. Shorter chain alkyl groups yield less useful Cope Elimination products. When certain advantaged AAA-N-oxides undergo slow and continuous Cope Elimination at a hot machined part surface, then valuable dialkylhydroxylamines and enols are formed. These valuable dialkylhydroxylamines and enols provide for antioxidant, boundary lubrication and fluid stabilizing properties. References: 1) Albini, A.; Synthesis 1993, (3), 263-277. 2) Bernier, D.; Wefelscheid, U. K.; Woodward, S.; Organic Preparations and Procedures International 2009, 41(3), 173-210. 3) O’Neil, I.; Science of Synthesis: Houben-Weyl Methods of Molecular Transformations, Volume 40b, Product Class 3, Amine-N-Oxides 2009, 855-891. 4) Shulman, G. P.; Canadian Journal of Chemistry 1966, 44, 1601-1604. N-Alkylalkanolamine Derivatives for Metalworking: e.g., tertiary N-alkylalkanolamine-N-oxides STLE 70th annual meeting Tuesday; April 15; 9:30 am; session 3H Taminco is a subsidiary of Eastman Chemical Company Presentation outline ! Introduction to tertiary AAA-N-oxides ! AAA-N-oxides as supplementary emulsifiers ! Tertiary AAA-N-oxides can undergo cope elimination in-situ; antioxidants; stabilizers ! MDEA as an ideal complementary amine for metalworking ! Synergex® T & MDEA; an all tertiary system boosted by N-oxides ! Synergex® amines & metalworking ! Conclusions The N-oxidation of amines: Tertiary amines → amine-N-oxides Secondary amines → nitrones Primary amines → hydroxylamine → oxime → nitroalkane → ……. NH3 → HA → H2NNH2 → N2 → N2O → NO → HNO2 → NO2/N2O4 → HNO3 N-oxidation is preferred over other paths The N-alkylalkanolamines N-oxides from tertiary N-alkylalkanolamines Tertiary amine-N-oxides & basicity Calculation of an HLB ! (Hydrophilic MW ÷ total MW) x100/5 ! Hydrophilic MW = 60 for one EO ! Hydrophilic MW = 104 for two EO ! Calculation developed for fatty alcohol ethoxylates ! Calculation provides rough estimate Alkanolamines & HLB (round down to integer; floor function) Hexane: Synergex® LA Synergex®: Synergex® T: AMP: MDEA: MEOA: HLB = 0 HLB = 7 HLB = 10 HLB = 12 HLB = 13 HLB = 17 HLB = 20 N-oxidation of tertiary amines creates a less pH sensitive hydrophilic group e.g., foam stabilizing DIMLA-N-oxide type surfactants The Cope elimination Cope elimination from tertiary AAA-N-oxides Antioxidant activity via hydroxylamine formation Emulsification & surfactant activity Semi-syn formula parts Naphthenic100 oil 50 DBAE-N-OXIDE/MDEA 37.5/62.5 Amide / soap emulsifier 16 BDEA-N-OXIDE/MDEA 34.5/65.5 Unique nonionic oligomeric ester emulsifier 7 DBAE-N-OXIDE/MIPA 70/30 DIPA oleamide 1:1 5 BDEA-N-OXIDE/MIPA 66/34 Palm oleic acid 5 Amine free, vegetable ester, emulsifier and lubricity additive 7.5 Carboxylate rust inhibitor 3 Water 20 TEOA or amine blend 10 Glycol ether DB 0 to 6 Amine blend ratios DBAE N oxide/MIPA required no glycol-ether DB – the other three formulas required 6 parts Emulsification & surfactant activity Amine blend ratios Synthetic formula parts DBAE-N-OXIDE/MDEA 37.5/62.5 Water 50 BDEA-N-OXIDE/MDEA 34.5/65.5 Reverse block polymer 25 DBAE-N-OXIDE/MIPA 70/30 TEOA or amine blend 20 BDEA-N-OXIDE/MIPA 66/34 Carboxylate rust inhibitor 5 Isononanoic acid 3 DBAE-N-oxide/MIPA required only 1 part isononanoic acid – the other four systems required 3 parts Tertiary AAA-N-oxides undergo Cope elimination in-situ Tertiary AAA-N-oxides undergo Cope elimination in-situ Tertiary AAA’s don’t readily N-oxidize and undergo Cope elimination in-situ Some tertiary AAA’s do N-oxidize and undergo Cope elimination in-situ when subjected to “machine” conditions Some tertiary AAA’s do N-oxidize and undergo Cope elimination in-situ when subjected to “machine” conditions Tertiary AAA-N-oxides undergo Cope elimination in-situ Falex Torque vs Jaw Load Chart DBAE N Oxide EM 706 blend 50% in Oil DBAE N Oxide EM 706 blend 25% in Oil DBAE N Oxide EM 706 blend Heated 2 hrs @ 250F in Oil at 50% DBAE N Oxide EM 706 blend Heated 2 hrs @ 250F in Oil at 25% 250 8.1 10.2 6.9 7.4 350 11.8 12.1 10.6 10.4 450 13.2 15.2 13.0 11.4 550 16.1 17.2 14.4 13.9 650 19.1 18.7 16.7 15.6 750 19.6 19.7 18.0 18.6 850 20.3 23.8 18.3 19.3 950 20.4 23.8 19.2 20.8 1050 22.1 25.1 20.3 20.2 1150 21.0 25.1 21.8 22.4 Average 17.2 19.1 15.9 16.0 Slope 0.0144 0.0175 0.0149 0.0164 Wear in mgs 52 2 Tertiary amine-N-oxides, MDEA & biostability Synthetic formula parts Semi-syn formula parts Water 50 Naphthenic 100 oil 50 Reverse block polymer 25 Amide/soap emulsifier 16 TEOA or amine blend 20 Unique nonionic oligomeric ester emulsifier 7 Carboxylate rust inhibitor 5 DIPA oleamide 1:1 5 Isononanoic acid 3 Palm oleic acid 5 Soluble oil formula parts Amine free, vegetable ester, emulsifier and lubricity additive 7.5 Naphthenic 100 oil 77 Carboxylate rust inhibitor 3 Soap sulfonate emulsifier 18 Water 20 TEOA or amine blend 3.5 TEOA or amine blend 10 TOFA 28 1 to 3.5 Amine blend ratios DBAE-N-OXIDE/MDEA 37.5/62.5 BDEA-N-OXIDE/MDEA 34.5/65.5 DBAE-N-OXIDE/MIPA 70/30 BDEA-N-OXIDE/MIPA 66/34 DBAE-N-OXIDE/MDEA/BDEA 1/3rd each BDEA-N-OXIDE/MDEA/BDEA 1/3rd each Glycol ether DB 0 to 6 Tertiary amine-N-oxides, MDEA & biostability Soluble oil formula initial pH pH day 1 pH day 4 pH day 8 pH day 12 TEA 8.55 8.35 7.95 7.35 7.30 MDEA/DBAE-N-OXIDE 8.80 8.55 8.50 8.45 8.25 MDEA/BDEA-N-OXIDE 8.85 8.55 8.50 8.45 8.20 DBAE-N-OXIDE/MIPA 8.85 8.80 8.50 8.10 7.85 BDEA-N-OXIDE/MIPA 8.90 8.60 8.05 7.65 7.55 Tertiary amine-N-oxides, Synergex® T, MDEA & biostability Tertiary amine-N-oxides & biostability initial pH at 6% pH day 12 at 6% CFU cfu/ml DBAE-N-OXIDE/MDEA/ Synergex®-T 9.00 8.90 2,700,000 BDEA-N-OXIDE/MDEA/ Synergex®-T 9.00 8.90 1,600,000 initial pH at 6% pH day 12 at 6% CFU cfu/ml DBAE-N-OXIDE/MDEA/ Synergex®-T 8.45 8.20 11,000 BDEA-N-OXIDE/MDEA/ Synergex®-T 8.45 8.25 9,900 initial pH at 6% pH day 12 at 6% CFU cfu/ml DBAE-N-OXIDE/MDEA/ Synergex®-T 8.80 7.95 6,800,000 BDEA-N-OXIDE/MDEA/ Synergex®-T 8.80 7.75 11,000,000 Synthetic formula Semi-syn formula Soluble oil formula The easiest & most economical approach is to produce the AAA derivative in-situ MDEA as a base molecule to be elaborated for multiple functions The following concentrate formula represents a good starting point for fully synthetic fluids based on Synergex® T & MDEA. Polartech SGL is a polyalkylene glycol formulated specifically for use in high performance fully synthetic metalworking fluids. Synergex® T MDEA 5% 10% + additional amount needed to reach desired pH in operating fluid Isononoic acid 8% Polartech SGL 20% Phenoxyethanol Water Up to 10% ≈ 50% * The biocontrol system can be changed from phenoxyethanol to 50 ppm BIT (diluted fluid) – use water to adjust volumes. The phenoxyethanol biocontrol system can be swapped out for BIT (50 ppm effective concentration operating fluid; adjust concentrate with water). Tertiary AAA derivatives (ASA/PIBSA adducts) Tertiary AAA-N-oxides in-situ oxidation as alternative to H2O2(aq) Synergex® AAA’s cover a wide range of HLB ! HLB = (weight hydrophilic/total weight) x 20 ! HLB = (60/GMW)x20 (for monoalkanolamines) ! HLB = (104/GMW)x20 (for dialkanolamines) Hexane: Synergex® LA: Synergex®: Synergex® T: MDEA: MEA: HLB = 0 HLB = 7 HLB = 10 HLB = 12 HLB = 17 HLB = 20 synergexamine.com Summary ! Tertiary AAA’s can form N-oxides ! N-oxides can be manufactured and added to arbitrary levels ! N-oxides can be produced in-situ from tertiary AAA’s ! MDEA is an ideal complementary tertiary AAA ! Synergex® tertiary AAA’s offer wide range of HLB and associated functions