24044-76-6Relevant articles and documents
Aerobic Visible-Light Induced Intermolecular S?N Bond Construction: Synthesis of 1,2,4-Thiadiazoles from Thioamides under Photosensitizer-Free Conditions
Wang, Hui,Xie, Shihua,Zhu, Hongjun,Zhuo, Liang
supporting information, p. 3398 - 3402 (2021/06/25)
Aerobic visible-light induced intermolecular S?N bond construction has been achieved without the addition of photosensitizer, metal, or base. With this strategy, 1,2,4-thiadiazoles can be obtained from thioamides. Preliminary mechanistic investigation suggested that the excited state of thioamides undergoes a single-electron-transfer (SET) process to afford thioamidyl radicals, which can be further transformed into a 1,2,4-thiadiazole through desulfurization and oxidative cyclization. The reaction has good functional group tolerance and represents a green method for the construction of S?N bonds.
A simple method for synthesis of thioamides and application in synthesis of 1,2,4-thiadiazoles
Cao, Xian Ting,Yang, Huiyong,Zheng, Hui,Zhang, Pengfei
, p. 509 - 517 (2018/03/27)
A novel, simple protocol is disclosed for the synthesis of 1,2,4-thiadiazoles starting from thioamides with Na2-eosin Y-sensitized titanium dioxide as catalyst through visible light irradiation (7 W blue LED light) and only 0.3 mol% catalysts were used. The raw material thioamides is prepared by aryl nitriles and sodium sulfide (Na2S9H2O) in DMF and in this reaction, readily available, inexpensive inorganic salt (Na2S9H2O) serves as the sulfur source and various functional groups of aryl nitriles were well and thioamides were synthesized successfully in gram-scale.
A mild and versatile synthesis of thioamides
Mahammed,Jayashankara,Premsai Rai,Mohana Raju,Arunachalam
experimental part, p. 2338 - 2340 (2009/12/08)
Aliphatic and aromatic nitriles react with thioacetic acid in the presence of calcium hydride to give the corresponding thioamides in good to excellent yields. The examples studied include haloaryl nitriles in which the halogen is facile towards SNAr reactions under other conditions. Georg Thieme Verlag Stuttgart.