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Noun
Synonyms
Extensive Definition
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 the
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.
Structure and bonding
Thiourea is a planar molecule. The C=S bond distance is 1.60±0.1 Å for a wide range of derivatives. This narrow range indicates that the C=S bond is insensitive to the nature of the substitutent. Thus, the thioamide, which is similar to an amide group, is difficult to perturb.Thiourea occurs in two tautomeric forms:
Synthesis of thiourea
The global annual production of thiourea is around 10,000 tons. About 40% is produced in Germany, another 40% in China, and 20% in Japan. Thiourea can be prepared from ammonium thiocyanate but more commonly is synthesized by the reaction of hydrogen sulfide with calcium cyanamide in the presence of carbon dioxide.Many thiourea derivatives are useful.
N,N-unsubstituted thioureas are generally prepared by allowing the
corresponding cyanamide to react with LiAlHSH in the presence of 1
N HCl in anhydrous diethyl
ether. LiAlHSH can be prepared by reacting sulfur with lithium
aluminium hydride.
Applications of thiourea
Thiourea reduces peroxides to the corresponding diols.[1] The intermediate of the reaction is an unstable epidioxide which can only be identified at -100 ℃. Epidioxide is similar to epoxide except with two oxygen atoms. This intermediate reduces to diol by thiourea.Thiourea is also used in the reductive workup of
ozonolysis to give carbonyl compounds.[2] Dimethyl
sulfide 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.[3]. The reaction capitalizes on the high
nuceophilicity of the sulfur center and the hydrolytic instability
of the isothiuronium salt:
-
- CS(NH2)2 + RX → RSC(NH2)2+X-
- RSC(NH2)2+X- + 2 NaOH → RSNa + OC(NH2)2 + NaX
- RSNa + HCl → RSH + NaCl
- RSC(NH2)2+X- + 2 NaOH → RSNa + OC(NH2)2 + NaX
- CS(NH2)2 + RX → RSC(NH2)2+X-
Thioureas are used a building blocks to pyrimidine derivatives. Thus
thioureas condense with β-dicarbonyl compounds.[4] The amino group
on the thiourea initially condenses with a carbonyl, followed by
cyclization and tautomerization. Desulfurization delivers the
pyrimidine.
Similarly, aminothiazoles can be synthesized by
the reaction of alpha-halo ketones and thiourea.[5]
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. The liquid silver cleaning product
TarnX is essentially a solution of thiourea. A leaching agent for
gold leaching and silver leaching can be created by selectively
oxidizing thiourea, bypassing the steps of cyanide use and
smelting.http://www.bnamericas.com/story.jsp?idioma=I§or=7¬icia=399641
Safety
A goitrogenic effect (enlargement of the thyroid gland) has been reported, and hepatic tumors have resulted from chronic administration in rat. Bone marrow depression also has been reported.References
- C. Kaneko, A. Sugimoro, and S. Tanaka. A facile one-step synthesis of cis-2-cyclopentene and cis-2-cyclohexene-1,4-diols from the corresponding cyclodienes. “Synthesis”. 876, (1974).
- Gupta, D., Soman, G., and Dev, S.. Thiourea, a convenient reagent for the reductive cleavage of olefin ozonolysis products. “Tetrahedron”. 38, 3013 (1982)
- Dodson, R. M., and King, L. C.. The reaction of ketones with halogens and thiourea. “J. Am. Chem. Soc.”, 67, 2242 (1945).
- The Chemistry of double-bonded functional groups edited by S. Patai. pp 1355-1496. John Wiley & Sons. New York, NY, 1977. ISBN 0-471-92493-8.
External links
thiourea in German: Thioharnstoff
thiourea in Japanese: チオ尿素
thiourea in Polish: Tiomocznik
thiourea in Portuguese: Tiouréia
thiourea in Turkish: Tiyoüre
thiourea in Chinese: 硫脲