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Photo-oxidation and Thermal Oxidations of Triptycene Thiols by Aryl Chalcogen Oxides
Author(s) -
Satyanarayana M. Chintala,
Peter F. Maness,
John T. Petroff,
John C. Throgmorton,
Miao Zhang,
Sara M. Omlid,
Ryan D. McCulla
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
acs omega
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.779
H-Index - 40
ISSN - 2470-1343
DOI - 10.1021/acsomega.0c04293
Subject(s) - sulfenic acid , chemistry , thiol , autoxidation , hydrogen peroxide , aryl , organic chemistry , sulfinic acid , dithiol , photochemistry , combinatorial chemistry , cysteine , alkyl , enzyme
Oxidation of thiols yield sulfenic acids, which are very unstable intermediates. As sulfenic acids are reactive, they form disulfides in the presence of thiols. However, sulfenic acids also oxidize to sulfinic acids (-SO 2 H) and sulfonic acids (-SO 3 H) at higher concentrations of oxidants. Hydrogen peroxide is a commonly used oxidant for the oxidation of thiols to yield sulfenic acids. However, hydrogen peroxide also oxidizes other reactive functional groups present in a molecule. In this work, the reaction intermediates arising from the oxidation of sterically hindered thiols by aryl chalcogen oxides, dibenzothiophene S -oxide (DBTO), dibenzoselenophene Se -oxide (DBSeO), and dibenzotellurophene Te -oxide (DBTeO), were investigated. Photodeoxygenation of DBTO produces triplet atomic oxygen [O( 3 P)], which has previously shown to preferentially react with thiols over other functional groups. Similarly, aryl selenoxides have also shown that they can thermally react selectively with thiols at room temperature to yield disulfides. Conversely, aryl telluroxides have been reported to oxidize thiols to disulfides thermally with no selectivity toward thiols. The results from this study demonstrate that sulfenic acids are an intermediate in the oxidation of thiols by DBTeO and by photodeoxygenation of DBTO. The results also showed that the oxidation of thiols by DBSeO yields sulfonic acids. Triptycene-9-thiol and 9-fluorotriptycene-10-thiol were for the thiols used in this oxidation reaction. This work expands the list of oxidants that can be used to oxidize thiols to obtain sulfenic acids.

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