Sulfurimide anions. II. Alkylation of heptasulfurimide - Inorganic

T. Chivers , W. G. Laidlaw , R. T. Oakley , M. Trsic. Journal of the American Chemical Society 1980 102 (18), 5773-5781. Abstract | PDF | PDF w/ Links...
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1736 BARBARAA m OLSENA N D FRBDRIC P. OLSEN

1;llorganic Chemistry

C O N T R I B U T I O N F R O M THE

DEPARTNENT OF

CHEBIISTRY,

MCMASTER UKIVERSITY,

HAMILTON, OSTARIO,CANADA

Sulfurimide Anions. 11. Alkylation of Heptasulfurimide1a2 BY BARBARA AKN OLSEN

ASD

I'REDRIC .'1

OLSES

Rerehed Fehiuery 10) 1969 The reaction of strong bases with heptasulfurimide in anhydrous tetrahydrofuran leads to proton abstraction ill competition with addition of base to sulfur-sulfur and/or sulfur-nitrogen bonds. Proton abstraction, leading to the heptasulfuriniide anion, is favored a t low temperatures and by relatively weak bases such as lithium hydroxide. Once formed, the heptasulfurimide anion persists in solution, probably in equilibrium with a small quantity of another species, for days a t room temperature and regenerates heptasulfurimide on acidification. The ion effects nucleophilic substitution on primary and secondary but not tertiary alkyl halides giving K-substituted alkyl derivatives of heptasulfurimide.

During the past decade heptasulfuriniide, three isomeric hexasulfurdiimides, 4--8 and two isomeric pentasulf~rtriimides~ have been isolated from the reaction of sulfur monochloride with ammonia in dimethylformamide. Of these materials, heptasulfurimide has been most widely studied. Reactions with formaldehyde,l o , l l carboxylic acids, l 2 sulfur mono- and dichlorides, l 3 benzoyl and acetyl chlorides, 10'13-16 cyclohexylcarbodiimide, l 2 boron trihalides, 16s1' sulfur trioxide, and [ ( C H B ) ~ S ~ ] ~have N H ~been ~ described. A ~ y l a t i o n , ' ~ benzoylation, l 4 and reactions with sulfur halidesz0have been reported for the hexasulfurdiimides while reactions of the pentasulfurtriimides have not been investigated. TetrasulfurtetraimideZ1appears to behave similarly to heptasulfurimide; reactions with formaldehydez'Sz2and phenyl isocyanate?' have been described. Only two of the above reactions have employed basic conditions. Pyridine or potassium carbonate was used as an acid scavenger in acylation while dilute aqueous potassium hydroxide served as a catalyst in the condensation with formaldehyde. The remaining reactions employ neutral or acidic conditions. There has been a tendency to avoid subjecting the sulfurimides to strongly basic conditions where it has been supposed (1) P a r t I : B. A. Olsen, F. P. Olsen, and E. M. Tingle, Chetn. C o m m z t n . , 554 (1968). (2) Presented a t the lnorganic Chemistry Section of the 156th National Meeting of t h e American Chemical Society, Atlantic City, N. J,, Sept 1968; see Abstract h-0. 0-52. ( 3 ) M. Becke-Goehring, H . Jenne, and E. Fluck, C h e w B e y . , 91, 1947 (1958). (4) J. Weiss, AIzgew. Chem., 71,246 (1959). (5) H. G. Heal, Aialuve, 199, 371 (1963). (6) P. T a m , H. 5. Schulze-Steinen, and J. E. Colchester, J . Chem. Soc., 2555 (1963). (7) J. Weiss, Z. Anovg. Allgem. Chem., 306, 190 (1960). (8) J. C. Van de Grampel and A. Vos, Rec. Tvau. Chim., 84, 599 (1965). (9) H . Heal and J. Kane, A-aluve, 203, 971 (1964). (IO) M. Becke-Goehring and W. Koch, 2. Araluvfoovsch., 7b, 634 (1952). (11) A. Meuwsen and F. Schlossnagel, Z . Anovg. Allgem. Chem., 271, 226 (1953). (12) J. E. Colchester, P. Tam, and H. J. Schulze-Steinen, J. Chem. Soc., 4918 (1963). (13) M. Becke-Goehring, H. Jenne, and V. Rekalic, Chem. Be?., 92, 855 (1959). (14) H. G. Heal and J. Kane, J . Chem. Eng. Data, 10, 386 (1965). (15) H. Garcia, C o m p t . R e n d . , C263, 1362 (1966). (16) H. G. Heal, J . I n o v g . A'ncl. Chem., 20, 165 (1961). (17) H. G. Heal, J . Chem. Soc., 4442 (1962). (18) M. Becke-Goehring and H . Hohenschutz, Nuturwissenschuften, 40, 291 (1953). (19) M. Becke-Goehring, A?zgew. Chem., 73, 589 (1961). ( 2 0 ) H. G. Heal and J. Kane, J. Polym. Sci., Part C , 3491 (1968). (21) A. Meuwsen, Chem. Be?., 62, 1959 (1929). (22) M .H. M.Arnold, J . Chem. Soc., l S 9 6 (1938).

the eight-membered ring would not survive. Sodium and mercury salts of heptasulfurimide, I 1 m z 3 2 4 and of t e t r a ~ u l f u r t e t r a i m i d e ~ have ~ - * ~ been reported, however, suggesting that such reactions might be successfully undertaken. While quite reasonable, the evidence presented for the formation of these ions was not compelling. Hydrolysis, for example, of the sodium salt of the presumed heptasulfurimide anion yielded ammonia, sulfur, and polysulfide ions while acidification gave sulfur dioxide, sulfur, and various sulfur acids. An attempted oxidation of the mercury salt of heptasulfurimide to bis(heptasulfurimidy1) by iodine gave only sulfur-nitrogen polymers.26 In no case has a compound been isolated from any of these salts which contained the intact ring structure. We have consequently sought further evidence for the existence of the heptasulfurimide anion by exploring its possible use in nucleophilic substitution reactions with alkyl halides as a potential route to the previously unavailable N-substituted alkyl derivatives of heptasulfurimide.27

Results In initial experiments evidence for the formation of a stable species identifiable as the heptasulfurimide anion was sought. Excess sodium hydride reacted with heptasulfurimide in anhydrous tetrahydrofuran a t 0" liberating 1.00 mol of hydrogen gas for each inole of imide reacted. The resulting solution was intensely blue-green. When this solution was acidified by pouring onto ice-cold dilute hydrochloric acid, the color was immediately discharged and 48% of the starting imide could be recovered. When methyl iodide was added to the blue-green solution a t O", a red oil containing several components was isolated. Hexane elution on a silica gel column gave a fairly good separation of these materials. Sulfur, the first component eluted from the r value on thin layer column, was identified by its R chromatography and by its melting point. A second component was obtained as a pale yellow oil. At(23) M. Becke-Goehring and G. Zirker, Z . Anovg. Allgem. Chern., 236, 70 (1956). (24) hf. Becke-Goehring and R. Schwarz, i b i d . , 296, 3 (1958). (25) A. Meuwsen and M . Losel, i b i d . . 271, 217 (1953). (26) J . Buckley and H. G. Heal, J . I m 1 . g . Xucl. Chern., 26, 321 (lQ6Rj. (27) H . G. Heal (private communication) has recently synthesized Nmethylheptasulfurimide by treating methylamine with sulfur monochloride.

1'01. 8, N O .8, August 156'9

ALKTIATIONOF HEPTASULFURIBIIDL 12'7

tempted crystallization from a variety of solvents failed to give a crystalline sample. The proton nmr spectrum showed a sharp singlet at -3.18 ppm consistent with an N-CH3 group. The mass spectrum showed an apparent molecular ion of composition S7NCH3, plus fragments corresponding t o S,(x = 1-6), NS, and S,NCHs (x = 1-5). The infrared spectra showed strong absorption at 1062 cm-l attributable t o a C-N stretching vibration and no absorption between '705 and 685 cm-' (as might have been expected for an S-CH, g r ~ u p ~ ~ Absorption ,~~), near 760 cm-I was attributable to an N-S stretching mode. Coupled with an observed molecular weight (osmometric) of 260 + 7 and a satisfactory elemental analysis, the composition and structure of the product were established as the N-methyl derivative of heptasulfurimide. The yield was 47%.30 Solutions of the anion retained their

TABLE I EFFECT O F

BASEON

Yield, % ' SiNCHi

Base

ANION

FORMATIOX

-----Yield, Sa

g-----

I