- Source: Thia-crown ether
In organic chemistry, thia-crown ethers are organosulfur compounds which are the thia analogues of crown ethers (cyclic polyethers). That is, they have a sulfur atom (sulfide linkage, −S−) in place of each oxygen atom (ether linkage, −O−) around the ring. While the parent crown ethers have the formulae (CH2CH2O)n, the parent thia-crown ethers have the formulae (CH2CH2S)n, where n = 3, 4, 5, 6. They have trivial names "x-ane-Sy", where x and y are the number of atoms in the ring and the number of those atoms that are sulfur, respectively. Thia-crown ethers exhibit affinities for transition metals.
1,4,7-Trithiacyclononane (9-ane-S3) is a tridentate ligand and forms complexes with many metal ions, including those considered hard, such as copper(II) and iron(II).
Tetradentate 14-ane-S4 and the hexadentate 18-ane-S6 are also known.
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Thia-crown ether
- Crown ether
- Macrocyclic ligand
- 1,4,7-Trithiacyclononane
- Diethylene glycol diglycidyl ether