In chemistry, a sulfonyl halide consists of a sulfonyl () functional group Single bond to a halogen atom. They have the general Chemical formula , where X is a halogen. The stability of sulfonyl halides decreases in the order > > > , all four types being well known. The sulfonyl chlorides and fluorides are of dominant importance in this series.
Sulfonyl halides have tetrahedral sulfur centres attached to two oxygen atoms, an organic radical, and a halide. In a representative example, methanesulfonyl chloride, the S=O, S−C, and S−Cl bond distances are respectively 142.4, 176.3, and 204.6 pm.
Benzenediazonium chloride reacts with sulfur dioxide and copper(I) chloride to give the sulfonyl chloride:
For alkylsulfonyl chlorides, one synthetic procedure is the Reed reaction:
These compounds react readily with many other nucleophiles as well, most notably alcohols and (see Hinsberg reaction). If the nucleophile is an alcohol, the product is a sulfonate ester; if it is an amine, the product is a sulfonamide:
However, sulfonyl chlorides also react frequently as a source of RSO and Cl+. For example benzenesulfonyl chloride chlorinates and mesyl chloride chlorinates para-xylene under Friedel-Crafts conditions. Using sodium sulfite as the nucleophilic reagent, p-toluenesulfonyl chloride is converted to its sulfinate salt, . Chlorosulfonated alkanes are susceptible to crosslinking via reactions with various nucleophiles.
Sulfonyl chlorides readily undergo Friedel–Crafts reactions with arenes giving , for example:
A readily available arylsulfonyl chloride source is tosyl chloride.Organic Syntheses, Coll. Vol. 5, p.39 (1973); Vol. 48, p.8 (1968) Online Article The desulfonation of arylsulfonyl chlorides provides a route to aryl chlorides:
Treatment of alkanesulfonyl chlorides having α-hydrogens with amine bases can give , highly unstable species that can be trapped:
Reduction with tetrathiotungstate ions () induces dimerization to the disulfide.
An industrially important derivative is benzenesulfonyl chloride. In the laboratory, useful reagents include tosyl chloride, brosyl chloride, nosylate chloride and mesylate chloride.
Perfluorooctanesulfonyl derivatives, such as PFOS, are produced from their sulfonyl fluoride, which are produced by electrofluorination
In the molecular biology, sulfonyl fluorides are used to label proteins. They specifically react with serine, threonine, tyrosine, lysine, cysteine, and histidine residues. The fluorides are more resistant than the corresponding chlorides and are therefore better suited to this task.
Some sulfonyl fluorides can also be used as deoxyfluorinating reagents, such as 2-pyridinesulfonyl fluoride (PyFluor) and N-tosyl-4-chlorobenzenesulfonimidoyl fluoride (SulfoxFluor).
Arenesulfonyl iodides, prepared from reaction of arenesulfinates or arenehydrazides with iodine, are much more stable and can initiate the synthesis of poly(methyl methacrylate) containing C–I, C–Br and C–Cl chain ends. Their reduction with silver gives the disulfone:
1,2,4-Trichlorobenzene is made industrially in this way.
Common sulfonyl chlorides
Sulfonyl fluorides
Sulfonyl bromides
Sulfonyl iodides
In popular culture
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