| Thiourea | |
|---|---|
| Gerneral | |
| Systematic name | Thiourea |
| Synonyms | Sulfourea, Thiocarbamide |
| Molecular formula | NH2CSNH2 |
| Molar mass | 76.12 g/mol |
| CAS number | * |
| Properties | |
| Melting point | 176-178℃ |
| density | 1.405 g/ml |
| Water solubility (g/L) | 95 at 10 °C 137 at 20 °C |
Thiourea is an organic compound of carbon, nitrogen, sulfur and hydrogen, with the formula CSN2H4 or (NH2)2CS. It is similar to urea, except that oxygen atom is replaced by a sulfur atom. The properties of urea and thiourea differ significantly because of the relative electronegativities of sulfur and oxygen. Thiourea is a versatile reagent in organic synthesis. "Thioureas" refers to a broad class of compounds with the general structure (R1R2N)(R3R4N)C=S. Thioureas are related to thioamides, e.g. RC(S)NR2, where R is methyl, ethyl, etc.
Thiourea occurs in two tautomeric forms:
Many thiourea derivatives that are useful. N,N-unsubstituted thioureas are generally prepared by allowing the corresponding cyanamide with LiAlHSH in the presence of 1 N HCl in anhydrous diethyl ether. LiAlHSH can be prepared by following procedure. To a suspension of sulfur powder (0.80 g, 10.0 mmol) in dry THF (100 ml) was added lithium aluminum hydride (0.38 g, 10.0 mmol) at room temperature under an argon atmosphere.
Thiourea is also used in the reductive workup of ozonolysis to give carbonyl compounds.* Dimethylsulfide is also an effective reagent for this reaction, but it is highly volatile (b.p. 37 ℃) and has an obnoxious odor whereas thiourea is odorless and conveniently non-volatile (reflecting its polarity).
Thiourea is commonly employed to convert alkyl halides to thiols. Such reactions proceed via the intermediacy of isothiuronium salts.*. The reaction capitalizes on the high nuceophilicity of the sulfur center and the hydrolytic instability of the isothiuronium salt:
Thioureas are used a building blocks to pyrimidine derivatives. Thus thioureas condense with β-dicarbonyl compounds.* The amino group on the thiourea initially condenses with a carbonyl, followed by cyclization and tautomerization. Desulfurization deliverss the pyrimidine.
Similarly, aminothiazoles can be synthesized by the reaction of alpha-halo ketones and thiourea.*
Another common application for use of thiourea is a common sulfur source for making semiconductor cadmium sulfide nanoparticle. A slurry of 1 g cadmium sulfate (1.3 mmol), 0.5 g thiourea (6.6 mmol), and 0.1 g SiO2 (1.7 mmol) were sonicated for 3 hours under ambient air at room temperature. The colorless slurry solution changes to yellow indicating the generation of CdS.
Other industrial uses of thiourea include production of flame retardant resins, and vulcanization accelerators. Thiourea is used as an auxiliary agent in diazo paper (light-sensitive photocopy paper) and almost all other types of copy paper.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Thiourea".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world