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Divinyl sulfide

Divinyl sulfide is the organosulfur compound with the formula S(CH=CH2)2. A colorless liquid with a faint odor, it is found in some species of Allium.[1]

Preparation

Divinyl sulfide is formed from hydrogen sulfide and acetylene.[2] Divinylsulfide can arise when inadvertently when acetylene is generated by hydrolysis of technical-grade calcium carbide contaminated with calcium sulfide.[3]

Divinylsulfide was first prepared in 1920 by the reaction of bis(2-chloroethyl)sulfide with sodium ethoxide:[3]

(ClCH2CH2)2S + 2 NaOEt → (CH2=CH)2S + 2 EtOH + 2 NaCl

Monovinyl sulfides

With the formula CH2=CHSR, a variety of monovinyl sulfides are known. They can arise by the dehydrohalogenation of -2-haloethyl phenyl sulfides.[4] One example is phenyl vinyl sulfide.[5][6] Alkyl ketones react with thiols in the presence of phosphorus pentoxide to give vinyl sulfides:[7]

RSH + CH3C(O)R' → CH2=C(SR)R' + H2O

References

  1. ^ "Divinyl sulfide (FDB012121)". FooDB.
  2. ^ Trotuş, Ioan-Teodor; Zimmermann, Tobias; Schüth, Ferdi (2014). "Catalytic Reactions of Acetylene: A Feedstock for the Chemical Industry Revisited". Chemical Reviews. 114 (3): 1761–1782. doi:10.1021/cr400357r. PMID 24228942.
  3. ^ a b Boris A. Trofimov; S. V. Amosova (1984). "Divinyl Sulfide: Synthesis, Properties, and Applications". Sulfur Reports. 3 (9): 323–393. doi:10.1080/01961778408082463.
  4. ^ Nina A. Nedolya; Boris A. Trofimov (1994). "Sulfur-Containing Vinyl Ethers". Sulfur Reports. 15 (2): 237–316. doi:10.1080/01961779408048961.
  5. ^ Leo A. Paquette; Richard V. C. Carr (1986). "Phenyl Vinyl Sulfone and Sulfoxide". Organic Syntheses. 64: 157. doi:10.15227/orgsyn.064.0157.
  6. ^ Daniel S. Reno; Richard J. Pariza (1997). "Phenyl Vinyl Sulfide". Organic Syntheses. 74: 124. doi:10.15227/orgsyn.074.0124.
  7. ^ Trost, Barry M.; Lavoie, Alvin C. (1983). "Enol thioethers as enol substitutes. An alkylation sequence". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 105 (15): 5075–5090. doi:10.1021/ja00353a037.