The kinetics of the conversion of thiophenols into sulfenyl
chlorides
using N-chlorosuccinimide (NCS) in dichloromethane
have been investigated by in situ
1H NMR
and stopped-flow UV–vis spectroscopy. The study reveals that
a slow direct chlorination of the thiophenol by NCS initiates a more
rapid but indirect process involving in situ generation
of a disulfide and then its cleavage by transient Cl2.
The latter is released from NCS by HCl and the switch in dominant
pathway results in sigmoidal kinetics for the thiophenol consumption.
The overall reaction rate can be attenuated by using an alkene to
scavenge the sulfenyl chloride before it reacts with the thiophenol.
The presence of water in the dichloromethane induces two distinct
kinetic regimes, dependent on whether the water is below or above
a critical concentration. The value of this critical concentration
is dependent on the amount of HCl in the system. As the exogenous
water is increased to the critical concentration, there is a proportionate
acceleration of the HCl-mediated release of Cl2 from the
NCS. At water concentrations above this, there is a progressive reduction
in the rate of Cl2 release due to {H2O + nHCl} undergoing a change in speciation or physical phase.
Alcohols, e.g., i-PrOH, efficiently catalyze the
conversion of thiophenols into sulfenyl chlorides, with further oxidation
retarded by trace amounts of disulfide, indicative of analogous HCl-catalyzed
slow-release of Cl2. High reactant concentrations can lead
to sufficient exothermicity to trigger an abrupt and vigorous release
of gaseous HCl. Potential methods to mitigate against developing these
hazardous conditions are also discussed.