In organic chemistry, a
thiol is a
organosulfur compound that contains a carbon-bonded sulfhydryl (-C-SH or R-SH) group (where R represents an alkane, alkene, or other carbon-containing moiety). Thiols are the sulfur analogue of
alcohols (that is, sulfur takes the place of oxygen in the hydroxyl group of an alcohol), and the word is a
portmanteau of "thio" + "
alcohol," with the first word deriving from
Greek θειον ("thion") = "sulfur". The -SH functional group itself is referred to as either a
thiol group or a
sulfhydryl group.
Many thiols have strong odours resembling that of garlic, and indeed the odor of garlic itself is due to a thiol. Thiols are used as odourants to assist in the detection of natural gas (which in pure form is odourless), and the "smell of natural gas" is due to the smell of the thiol used as the odourant.
Thiols are often referred to as mercaptans. The term mercaptan is derived from the Latin mercurium captans (capturing mercury) because the thiolate group bonds so strongly with mercury compounds.
Structure and bonding
Thiols and alcohols have similar molecular structure. The major difference is the size of the
chalcogenide, C-S bond lengths being around 180 picometers in length. The C-S-H angles approach 90°. In the solid or molten liquids, the
hydrogen-bonding between individual thiol groups is weak, the main cohesive force being
van der Waals interactions between the highly polarizable divalent sulfur centers.
Due to the small electronegativity difference between sulfur and hydrogen, an S-H bond is less polar than the hydroxyl group. Thiols have a lower dipole moment relative to the corresponding alcohol.
Nomenclature
Several ways of naming the alkylthiols:
The preferred method (used by the IUPAC) is to add the suffix -thiol to the name of the alkane. The method is nearly identical to naming an alcohol. Example: CH3SH would be methanethiol.
An older method, the word mercaptan replaces alcohol in the name of the equivalent alcohol compound. Example: CH3SH would be methyl mercaptan, just as CH3OH is called methyl alcohol.
As a prefix, the terms sulfanyl or mercapto are used. Example: mercaptopurine.
Physical properties
Odor
Many thiols have strong
odours resembling that of
garlic. The odours of thiols are often strong and repulsive, particularly for those of low molecular weight.
Skunk spray is composed mainly of low molecular weight thiol compounds. These compounds are detectable by the human nose at concentrations of only 10 parts per billion.
Thiols are also responsible for a class of wine faults caused by an unintended reaction between sulfur and yeast and the "skunky" odour of beer that has been exposed to ultraviolet light.
However, not all thiols have unpleasant odours. For example, grapefruit mercaptan, a monoterpenoid thiol, is responsible for the characteristic scent of grapefruit. This effect is present only at low concentrations. The pure mercaptan has an unpleasant odour.
Natural gas distributors began adding thiols, originally ethanethiol, to natural gas, which is naturally odourless, after the deadly 1937 New London School explosion in New London, Texas. Most gas odourants utilized currently contain mixtures of mercaptans and sulfides, with t-butyl mercaptan as the main odour constituent. In situations where thiols are used in commercial industry, such as liquid petroleum gas tankers and bulk handling systems, the use of an oxidizing catalyst is used to destroy the odour. A copper-based oxidation catalyst neutralizes the volatile thiols and transforms them into inert products.
Boiling points and solubility
Thiols show little association by
hydrogen bonding, with both water molecules and among themselves. Hence, they have lower
boiling points and are less
soluble in water and other
polar solvents than alcohols of similar molecular weight. Thiols and thioethers have similar solubility characteristics and boiling points.
Characterization
Volatile thiols are easily and almost unerringly detected by their distinctive odor. S-specific analyzers for
gas chromatographs are useful. Spectroscopic indicators are the D
2O-exchangeable S
H signal in the
1H
NMR spectrum (S has no useful "NMR
isotopes"). The ν
SH band appears near 2400 cm
−1 in the
IR spectrum.
Laboratory methods
Many methods are useful for the synthesis of thiols on the laboratory scale. The direct reaction of a
halogenoalkane with
sodium hydrosulfide is generally
inefficient owing to the competing formation of
thioethers:
: CH
3CH
2Br + NaSH → CH
3CH
2SH + NaBr
: CH
3CH
2Br + CH
3CH
2SH → (CH
3CH
2)
2S + HBr
Instead, alkyl halides are converted to thiols via a S-alkylation of
thiourea. This multistep, one-pot process proceeds via the intermediacy of the isothiouronium salt, which is hydrolyzed in a separate step:
: CH
3CH
2Br + SC(NH
2)
2 → [CH
3CH
2SC(NH
2)
2]Br
: [CH
3CH
2SC(NH
2)
2]Br + NaOH → CH
3CH
2SH + OC(NH
2)
2 + NaBr
The thiourea route works well with primary halides, especially activated ones. Secondary and tertiary thiols are less easily prepared. Secondary thiols can be prepared from the ketone via the corresponding dithioketals.
Organolithium compounds and Grignard reagents react with sulfur to give the thiolates, which are readily hydrolyzed:
:RLi + S → RSLi
:RSLi + HCl → RSH + LiCl
Phenols can be converted to the thiophenols via rearrangement of their O-aryl dialkylthiocarbamates.
Many thiols are prepared by reductive dealkylation of thioethers, especially benzyl derivatives and thioacetals.
Reactions
Akin to the chemistry of alcohols, thiols form
thioethers,
thioacetals and
thioesters, which are analogous to
ethers,
acetals, and
esters. Thiols and alcohols are also very different in their reactivity, thiols being easily oxidized and thiolates being highly potent nucleophiles.
S-alkylation
Thiols, or more particularly their conjugate bases, are readily alkylated to give thioethers:
:RSH + R'Br +
base → RSR' + [H
base]Br
Acidity
Relative to the alcohols, thiols are fairly acidic. Butanethiol has a
pKa of 10.5 vs 15 for butanol. Thiophenol has a
pKa of 6 vs 10 for phenol. Thus, thiolates can be obtained from thiols by treatment with alkali hydroxides.
Redox
Thiols, especially in the presence of base, are readily
oxidized by reagents such as
iodine to give an organic
disulfide (R-S-S-R).
: 2 R-SH + Br
2 → R-S-S-R + 2 HBr
Oxidation by more powerful reagents such as
sodium hypochlorite or
hydrogen peroxide yields
sulfonic acids (RSO
3H).
: R-SH + 3H
2O
2 → RSO
3H + 3H
2O
Oxidation by oxygen in the presence of heterogeneous catalysts:
: 2R-SH + 1/2O
2 → RS-SR + H
2O
Thiols participate in thiol-disulfide exchange:
:RS-SR + 2 R'SH → 2 RSH + R'S-SR'
This reaction is especially important in nature.
Metal ion complexation
Thiolates, the conjugate bases derived from thiols, form strong complexes with many metal ions, especially those classified as
soft. The term
mercaptan is derived from the
Latin mercurium captans (capturing mercury)
because the thiolate group bonds so strongly with
mercury compounds. The stability of metal thiolates parallels that of the corresponding sulfide minerals.
Biological importance
Cysteine and cystine
As the functional group of the
amino acid cysteine, the thiol group plays an important role in biology. When the thiol groups of two cysteine residues (as in monomers or constituent units) are brought near each other in the course of
protein folding, an
oxidation reaction can generate a
cystine unit with a
disulfide bond (-S-S-). Disulfide bonds can contribute to a protein's
tertiary structure if the cysteines are part of the same
peptide chain, or contribute to the
quaternary structure of multi-unit proteins by forming fairly strong covalent bonds between different peptide chains. A physical manifestation of cysteine-cystine equilibrium is provided by
hair straightening technologies.
Sulfhydryl groups in the active site of an enzyme can form noncovalent bonds with the enzyme's substrate as well, contributing to catalytic activity. Active site cysteine residues are the functional unit in cysteine proteases. Cysteine residues may also react with heavy metal ions (Zn2+, Cd2+, Pb2+, Hg2+, Ag+) because of the high affinity between the soft sulfide and the soft metal (see hard and soft acids and bases). This can deform and inactivate the protein, and is one mechanism of heavy metal poisoning.
Cofactors
Many cofactors (non-protein-based helper molecules) feature thiols. The biosynthesis and degradation of fatty acids and related long-chain hydrocarbons is conducted on a scaffold that anchors the growing chain through a thioester derived from the thiol
Coenzyme A. The
biosynthesis of
methane, the principal
hydrocarbon on earth, arises from the reaction mediated by
coenzyme M, 2-mercaptoethyl sulfonic acid.
Examples of thiols
Methanethiol - CH3SH [m-mercaptan]
Ethanethiol - C2H5SH [e- mercaptan]
1-Propanethiol - C3H7SH [n-P mercaptan]
2-Propanethiol - CH3CH(SH)CH3 [2C3 mercaptan]
Butanethiol - C4H9SH [n-butyl mercaptan]
tert-Butyl mercaptan - C(CH3)3SH [t-butyl mercaptan]
Pentanethiols - C5H11SH [pentyl mercaptan]
Coenzyme A
Glutathione
Cysteine
2-Mercaptoethanol
Dithiothreitol/dithioerythritol (an epimeric pair)
2-Mercaptoindole
Metallothioneins
See also
Doctor sweetening process
Thiol-disulfide exchange
References
External links
Applications, Properties, and Synthesis of w-Functionalized n-Alkanethiols and Disulfides — the Building Blocks of Self-Assembled Monolayers by D. Witt, R. Klajn, P. Barski, B.A. Grzybowski at Northwestern University.
Mercaptan, by The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia.
What is Mercaptan?, by Columbia Gas of Pennsylvania and Maryland.
What Is the Worst Smelling Chemical?, by About Chemistry.
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Category:Functional groups
Category:Organic compounds