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In
organic chemistry Organic chemistry is a subdiscipline within chemistry involving the science, scientific study of the structure, properties, and reactions of organic compounds and organic materials, i.e., matter in its various forms that contain carbon atoms.Clay ...
, episulfides are a class of
organic compound In chemistry, organic compounds are generally any chemical compounds that contain carbon- hydrogen or carbon-carbon bonds. Due to carbon's ability to catenate (form chains with other carbon atoms), millions of organic compounds are known. Th ...
s that contain a saturated, heterocyclic ring consisting of two
carbon Carbon () is a chemical element with the symbol C and atomic number 6. It is nonmetallic and tetravalent—its atom making four electrons available to form covalent chemical bonds. It belongs to group 14 of the periodic table. Carbon makes ...
atoms and one sulfur atom. It is the sulfur analogue of an epoxide or aziridine. They are also known as thiiranes, olefin sulfides, thioalkylene oxides, and thiacyclopropanes. Episulfides are less common and generally less stable than epoxides. The most common derivative is ethylene sulfide ().


Structure

According to electron diffraction, the and distances in ethylene sulfide are respectively 1.473 and 1.811  Å. The and angles are respectively 66.0 and 48.0°.


Preparation


History

A number of chemists in the early 1900s, including Staudinger and Pfenninger (1916), as well as Delepine (1920) studied episulfides.Sander, M. Thiiranes. Chem. Rev. 1966, 66(3), 297-339. I 1934 Dachlauer and Jackel devised a general synthesis of episulfides from epoxides using alkali thiocyanates and thiourea.


Contemporary methods

Following the lead of Dachlauer and Jackel, contemporary routes to episulfides utilize a two-step method, converting an olefin to an epoxide followed by thiation using thiocyanate or thiourea. : Episulfides can also be prepared from cyclic carbonates, hydroxy mercaptans, hydroxyalkyl halides, dihaloalkanes, and halo mercaptans. The reaction of ethylene carbonate and KSCN gives ethylene sulfide: :KSCN + C2H4O2CO -> KOCN + C2H4S + CO2 The metal-catalyzed reaction of sulfur with alkenes has been demonstrated. :\text + \text \longrightarrow \text


Reactions

Common uses of episulfides in both academic and industrial settings most often involve their use as monomers in polymerization reactions. Episulfides have an innate ring strain due to the nature of three-membered rings. Therefore, most reactions of episulfides involve ring-opening. Most commonly, nucleophiles are employed for the ring-opening process. For terminal episulfide, nucleophiles attack the primary carbon. Nucleophiles include anionic hydride, thiolates, alkoxide, amines, and carbanions. :


Applications

Thiiranes occur very rarely in nature and are of no significance medicinally. Very few commercial applications exist, although the polymerization of episulfide has been reported.


Dithiiranes

Dithiiranes are three membered rings containing two sulfur atoms and one carbon. One example was prepared by oxidation of a 1,3- dithietane.


References

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