THIOL

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Sulfhydryl

In organic chemistry, a 'thiol' is a compound that contains the functional group composed of a sulfur atom and a hydrogen atom (-SH). Being the sulfur analogue of an alcohol group (-OH), this functional group is referred to either as a ''thiol group'' or a ''sulfhydryl group''. More traditionally, thiols are often referred to as 'mercaptans'.

Contents
Nomenclature
Etymology
Physical Properties
Odor
Boiling points and solubility
Chemical Properties
Synthesis
Reactions
Acidity
Biological importance
Examples of thiols
See also
External links

Nomenclature


When a thiol group is a substituent on an alkane, there are several ways of naming the resulting thiol:

★ 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''. (CH3OH would be methyl alcohol)

★ As a prefix, the term ''mercapto''- is used. Example: mercaptopurine.

Etymology


The term ''mercaptan'' comes from the Latin ''mercurius captans'', meaning 'laying hold of mercury,' because the –SH group binds tightly to the element mercury.

Physical Properties


Odor

Many thiols are colorless liquids having an odor resembling that of garlic. The odor of thiols is often strong and repulsive, particularly for those of low molecular weight. Thiols bind strongly to skin proteins, and are responsible for the intolerable, persistent odor produced by the spraying of skunks. Natural gas distributors began adding various forms of pungent thiols, usually ethanethiol, to natural gas, which is naturally odorless, after the deadly 1937 New London School explosion in New London, Texas. Thiols are also responsible for a class of wine faults caused by an unintended reaction between sulfur and yeast. However, not all thiols have unpleasant odors. For example, grapefruit mercaptan, a monoterpenoid thiol, is responsible for the characteristic scent of grapefruit.
Boiling points and solubility

Due to the small electronegativity difference between sulfur and hydrogen, an S-H bond is practically nonpolar covalent. Therefore, the S-H bond in the thiols have a lower dipole moment as compared to the alcohol's O-H bond. 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 are as soluble and have similar boiling points to isomeric sulfides.

Chemical Properties


Synthesis

The methods used in making thiols are analogous to those used to make alcohols and ethers. The reactions are quicker and higher yielding because sulfur anions are better nucleophiles than oxygen atoms.
Thiols are formed when a halogenoalkane is heated with a solution of sodium hydrosulfide
: CH3CH2Br + NaSH heated in ethanol(aq) → CH3CH2SH + NaBr
In addition, disulfides can be readily reduced by reducing agents such as lithium aluminium hydride in dry ether to form two thiols.
: R-S-S-R' → R-SH + R'-SH
Reactions

The thiol group is the sulfur analog of the hydroxyl group (-OH) found in alcohols. Since sulfur and oxygen belong to the same periodic table group, they share some similar chemical bonding properties. Like alcohol, in general, the deprotonated form RS (called a 'thiolate') is more chemically reactive than the protonated thiol form RSH
The chemistry of thiols is thus related to the chemistry of alcohols: thiols form thioethers, thioacetals and thioesters, which are analogous to ethers, acetals, and esters. Furthermore, a thiol group can react with an alkene to create a thioether. (In fact, biochemically, thiol groups may react with vinyl groups to form a thioether linkage.)
Acidity

The sulfur atom of a thiol is quite nucleophilic, rather more so than the oxygen atom of an alcohol. The thiol group is fairly acidic with a usual pKa around 10 to 11. In the presence of a base, a thiolate anion is formed which is a very powerful nucleophile. The group and its corresponding anion are readily oxidized by reagents such as bromine to give an organic disulfide (R-S-S-R).
: 2R-SH + Br2 → R-S-S-R + 2HBr
Oxidation by more powerful reagents such as sodium hypochlorite or hydrogen peroxide yield sulfonic acids (RSO3H).
: 2R-SH + 2H2O2 → RSO3H + 2H2O

Biological importance


As the functional group of the amino acid cysteine, the thiol group plays an important role in biological systems. 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 create 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. The heavy and light chains of antibodies are held together by disulfide bridges. Also, the kinks in curly hair are a product of cystine formation. Permanents take advantage of the oxidizability of cysteine residues. The chemicals used in hair straightening are reductants that reduce cystine disulfide bridges to free cysteine sulfhydryl groups, while chemicals used in hair curling are oxidants that oxidize cysteine sulfhydryl groups to form cystine disulfide bridges. 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.

Examples of thiols



Methanethiol - CH3SH

Ethanethiol - C2H5SH

Coenzyme A

Lipoamide

Glutathione

Cysteine

Dithiothreitol/dithioerythritol (an epimeric pair)

2-Mercaptoindole

See also



Thial

Disulfide bond

Thiol-disulfide exchange

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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