Aromatic amine

An aromatic amine is an organic compound consisting of an aromatic ring attached to an amine. It is a broad class of compounds that encompasses anilines, but also many more complex aromatic rings and many amine substituents beyond NH2. Such compounds occur widely.[1]

Representative aromatic amines
Aromatic ringName of parent amineExample
benzeneanilineSubstituted anilines
benzenephenylenediaminethe antioxidant p-phenylenediamine
tolueneo-toludinethe pharmaceutical prilocain
toluenediaminotoluenesthe hair dye ingredient 2,5-Diaminotoluene
naphthalene1-AminonaphthaleneVictoria blue dyes
pyridine2-Aminopyridinethe drug tenoxicam
pyrimidine2-Aminopyrimidinethe nucleobase cytosine
quinoline8-Aminoquinolinethe drug primaquine
purine2-Aminopurinethe nucleobase guanine
acridine9-Aminoacridinefluorescent dyes

Aromatic amines are widely used as precursor to pesticides, pharmaceuticals, and dyes.

Aromatic amines in textiles

Since August 2012, the new standard EN 14362-1:2012 Textiles - Methods for determination of certain aromatic amines derived from azo colorants - Part 1: Detection of the use of certain azo colorants accessible with and without extracting the fibres is effective. It had been officially approved by the European Committee for Standardization (CEN) and supersedes the test standards EN 14362-1: 2003 and EN 14362-2: 2003.

The standard describes a procedure to detect EU banned aromatic amines derived from azo colorants in textile fibres, including natural, man-made, regenerated, and blended fibres. The standard is also relevant for all coloured textiles, e.g. dyed, printed, and coated textiles.

See also

References

  1. P. F. Vogt, J. J. Gerulis, "Amines, Aromatic" in Ullmann’s Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry 2005, Wiley-VCH, Weinheim. doi:10.1002/14356007.a02_037
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