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3 answers

For a compound to be polar is must have at least one polar bond and also have the right (non-symmetrical) geometry.
2-aminobenzamide fulfils both of these criteria so IS polar.

Since it's an amide (and remember these are also know as ACID amides because they are derived from organic acids) then you'd expect it to react with a base such as NaOH.
The amino- part (being basic) may also react with HCl under the right conditions.
Can't see that it would react with an ester though.

2006-11-05 02:51:45 · answer #1 · answered by drjaycat 5 · 0 0

"is 2-aminobenzamide polar or non polar"

polar

"does it react with ethylacetate or HCl or NaOH?"

amide undergoes hydrolysis with BOTH acid and base, give amine and carboxylic acid. The only difference is, acid-catalysed hydrolysis is reversible, while base-catalysed hydrolysis is inreversible. amino group could react with a more reactive carbonyl group on ester to produce amide, in theory, since amide is probably the most unreactive carbonyl compound. But I'm not sure what condition you need and the yield.

2006-11-05 03:14:06 · answer #2 · answered by nickyTheKnight 3 · 0 0

2-amino Benzamide

2016-12-13 05:29:48 · answer #3 · answered by gallop 4 · 0 0

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