14204-31-0Relevant articles and documents
Electrochemical Direct Thiolation of Lactams with Mercaptans: An Efficient Access to N-Acylsulfenamides
Wei, Zhaoxin,Wang, Renjie,Zhang, Yonghong,Wang, Bin,Xia, Yu,Abdukader, Ablimit,Xue, Fei,Jin, Weiwei,Liu, Chenjiang
supporting information, p. 4728 - 4732 (2021/09/10)
An efficient and eco-friendly electrochemical methodology for the oxidative cross coupling hydrogen evolution (CCHE) reactions of lactams with thiols is presented. Various electron deficient N-acylsulfenamides are smoothly produced in modest to excellent yields without using any external oxidant. Elementary mechanistic insight supports a possible free radical process and hydrogen is the only side product. This approach provides a safe, convenient, and economical preparation of synthetically important N-thiophthalimides on a gram scale.
Photochemical, Metal-Free Sigmatropic Rearrangement Reactions of Sulfur Ylides
Yang, Zhen,Guo, Yujing,Koenigs, Rene M.
supporting information, p. 6703 - 6706 (2019/05/10)
Sigmatropic rearrangement reactions constitute one of the most fundamental reactions of carbenes. While state-of-the-art synthetic methods require the use of expensive precious metal catalysts, the application of visible light for the photolysis of α-aryldiazoacetates is much less investigated and provides an operationally simple entry to carbenes under mild reaction conditions. Herein, we report on blue-light induced sigmatropic rearrangement reactions of sulfur compounds with α-aryldiazoacetates. This process, depending on the substitution pattern of the sulfide, opens up formal insertion reactions of carbenes into S?N, S?C, or C?H bonds.
Comparison of conventional and microwave-assisted synthesis of some new sulfenamides under free catalyst and ligand
Yakan, Hasan,Kütük, Halil
, p. 2047 - 2057 (2018/09/25)
Abstract: Sulfenamide and its derivatives (S–N bond) have been synthesized with classical method in the literature. However, microwave-assisted synthesis of a series of N-(substituted phenylthio), N-(benzylthio), N-(cyclothio), and N-(2-mercaptobenzimidazolyl)amines has been not in the literature yet. They have been obtained from treating some amines (4?mmol) with thiophthalimides (PhthSR, 1?mmol) using sulfur transfer reagent in the presence of 2-ethoxyethanol (β-ee, neat) under microwave irradiation at 50?°C. The scope of this reaction was shown by the efficient synthesis of sulfenamides in good to excellent yields of 70–98% under free catalyst and ligand. Nine of the synthesized sulfenamide derivatives are novel. All of the thiols react with morpholine to give corresponding sulfenamides in excellent yields of 78–98%. Thiophenol, 4-methylthiophenol, 4-chlorothiophenol, and 4-fluorothiophenol react with cyclohexylamine to give corresponding sulfenamides in high yields 81–92%. Thiophenol, 4-methylthiophenol, 4-chlorothiophenol react with pyrrolidine to give corresponding sulfenamides in good yields of 70–76%. We observed that the reaction of t-butylamine with N-(phenylthio)phthalimide gave desired sulfenamide under microwave irradiation in the presence of DPPH as radical scavenger reagent in high yield of 93%. Aniline, benzylamine, 1-hexylamine, ethanolamine, diethylamine, N-ethyl-n-butylamine, N-ethylaniline, N-benzylmethylamine, t-butylamine react with thiols to give symmetrical disulfides instead of desired products under microwave irradiation, 2-ethoxyethanol as a solvent (neat), and at 50?°C. In this study, microwave-assisted synthesis method was compared with the classical method. All the products obtained were purified with chromatographic method and the analysis of these products was confirmed with IR, 1H NMR, 13C NMR spectroscopy, MS spectrometry, and elemental methods. Graphical abstract: [Figure not available: see fulltext.].