- Thioether
A thioether (similar to "
sulfide ") is a functional group inorganic chemistry that has the structure R1-S-R2 as shown on right. Like many other sulfur-containing compounds, volatile thioethers characteristically have foul odors. [R. J. Cremlyn “An Introduction to Organosulfur Chemistry” John Wiley and Sons: Chichester (1996). ISBN 0-471-95512-4.]A thioether is similar to an
ether except that it contains a sulfur atom in place of the oxygen. Because oxygen and sulfur belong to thechalcogen s group in theperiodic table , the chemical properties of ethers and thioethers share some commonalities. This functional group is important in biology, most notably in theamino acid methionine and thecofactor biotin .Preparation
* Thioethers are typically prepared by the
alkylation ofthiol s::R-Br + HS-R' → R-S-R' + HBrSuch reactions are accelerated in the presence of base, which converts the thiol into the more nucleophilic thiolate.
* An alternative method of synthesis includes the addition of a thiol to analkene , typically catalysed byfree radical s::R-CH=CH2 + HS-R' → R-CH2-CH2-S-R'
* Thioethers can also be prepared via thePummerer rearrangement .Reactions
*While ethers are generally stable, thioethers (R-S-R) are easily oxidized to the
sulfoxide s (R-S(=O)-R), which can themselves be further oxidized tosulfone s (R-S(=O)2-R). For example,dimethyl sulfide can be oxidized as follows::S(CH3)2 +O → OS(CH3)2:OS(CH3)2 +O → O2S(CH3)2Typical oxidants includeperoxide s.*The sulfur-sulfur bond in
disulfide s is susceptible to cleavage by nucleophiles, and reaction with a carbon nucleophile produces a thioether:: R3C- + R1S-SR2 → R3CSR1 + R2S-*Trialkysulfonium salts react with nucleophiles with a dialkyl sulfide as a leaving group::Nu- + R3S+ → Nu-R + R-S-RThis reaction is exploited in biological systems as a means of transferring an alkyl group. For example, S-adenosylmethionine acts as a methylating agent in biological SN2 reactions.
*Ethers can be
alkylate d at oxygen only with difficulty to give highly reactive trialkyloxonium salts. In contrast, thioethers are readily alkylated to give stablesulfonium salts, such as trimethylsulfonium::S(CH3)2 + CH3I → [S(CH3)3] +I-Thiophenes
The
heterocyclic compound thiophene is formally a thioether. Because of thearomatic character of thisheterocycle , the nonbonding electrons on sulfur, normally responsible for thenucleophilicity so characteristic of thioethers, aredelocalize d into the π-system. Consequently thiophene exhibits few properties expected for a thioether - thiophene is non-nucleophilic at sulfur and, in fact, is sweet-smelling. Uponhydrogenation , thiophene givestetrahydrothiophene , C4H8S, which indeed does behave as a typical thioether.References
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