Sulfinylmethane or sulfine is an organic compound with molecular formula H2CSO. It is the simplest sulfine. Sulfines are chemical compounds with the general structure XY=SO.[1]IUPAC considers the term 'sulfine' obsolete,[2] preferring instead thiocarbonyl S-oxide; despite this, the use of the term sulfine still predominates in the chemical literature.
Substituted sulfines
The parent sulfine H2CSO is very labile, whereas substituted derivatives are more conveniently isolated.
^Binne Zwanenburg (1989). "Sulfine Chemistry". Phosphorus, Sulfur, and Silicon and the Related Elements. 43 (1–2): 1–24. doi:10.1080/10426508908040276.
^Block E., Gillies J.Z., Gillies C.W., Bazzi A.A., Putman D., Revelle L.K., Wang D., Zhang X. (1996). "Allium Chemistry: Microwave Spectroscopic Identification, Mechanism of Formation, Synthesis, and Reactions of (E,Z)-Propanethial S-Oxide, the Lachrymatory Factor of the Onion (Allium cepa)". J. Am. Chem. Soc. 118 (32): 7492–7501. doi:10.1021/ja960722j.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^G. Rindorf; L. Carlsen (1979). "The crystal and molecular structures of the thiobenzophenone S-oxide and thiobenzophenone". Acta Crystallogr. B35 (5): 1179–1182. Bibcode:1979AcCrB..35.1179R. doi:10.1107/S0567740879005835.
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