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Carbon sulphur

Concentrated sulphuric acid is an oxidising agent, particularly when hot, but the oxidising power of sulphuric acid decreases rapidly with dilution. The hot concentrated acid will oxidise non-metals, for example carbon, sulphur and phosphorous to give, respectively, carbon dioxide, sulphur dioxide and phosphoric(V) acid. It also oxidises many metals to give their sulphates cast iron, however, is not affected. The mechanisms of these reactions are complex and the acid gives a number of reduction products. [Pg.301]

With the salts of certain weak acids, such as carbonic, sulphurous, and nitrous acids, an additional factor contributing to the increased solubility is the actual disappearance of the acid from solution either spontaneously, or on gentle warming. An explanation is thus provided for the well-known solubility of the sparingly soluble sulphites, carbonates, oxalates, phosphates(V), arsenites(III), arsenates(V), cyanides (with the exception of silver cyanide, which is actually a salt of the strong acid H[Ag(CN)2]), fluorides, acetates, and salts of other organic acids in strong acids. [Pg.30]

Sharkey, W. H. Polymerizations Through the Carbon-Sulphur Double Bond. Vol. 17, pp. 73— 103. [Pg.160]

Sharkey, W. H. Polymerizations Through the Carbon-Sulphur Double Bond. VoL 17, pp. 73-103. Shimidzu, T. Cooperative Actions in the Nucleophile-Containing Polymers. Vol. 23, pp. 55-102. Slichter, W. P. The Study of High Polymers by Nuclear Magnetic Resonance. VoL 1, pp. 35-74. Small, P. A. Long-Chain Branching in Polymers. VoL 18,pp. 1-64. [Pg.186]

Jones and coworkers200 found that a variety of sulphenic acids may be generated by thermolysis of the readily available /J-cyanosulphoxides (equation 81) and observed their highly regiospecific addition also to non-conjugated alkynes (Table 12). As expected for a pericyclic mechanism, the reaction afforded the product of a stereospecific cis-addition. However, the regioselectivity of the addition suggests that the partial carbon-sulphur bond in the transition state 148 is polarized in such a way that the carbon atom has some cationic character (equation 82). [Pg.270]

In all the desulphonylation reactions discussed in Sections III.B and III.C the sulphur is lost from the starting sulphone and is reduced in the process simultaneously, the former carbon-sulphur bond is either reduced to a C—H bond or is converted into a C=C bond. The reactions described in this section have the common thread that the sulphur atom is lost with reduction at sulphur, but the carbon atom is converted directly into a carbonyl group. Formally, these reactions offer a route from alkyl halides to aldehydes or ketones. [Pg.961]

This spectrum was obtained from the surface of a sample of an iron-chromium-nickel alloy, and peaks from these elements, resulting from LMM transitions, are identified together with those from contaminants such as carbon, sulphur and oxygen. [Pg.174]

Hydrogenolysis of carbon-sulphur bonds (desulphurization) is carried out with Raney nickel. [Pg.294]

Hydrogenolysis of carbon-halogen and carbon-sulphur bonds... [Pg.484]

CARBON-NITROGEN, CARBON-OXYGEN, CARBON-SULPHUR ETC... [Pg.533]

The authors believe that the results are more readily explainable on the basis of a two-point absorption involving the vanadium-carbon-sulphur complex, the formation of which may be effected with little distortion of the tetrahedral valence angles. [Pg.132]

One carbon-sulphur bond in dithioacetals can be preferentially cleaved because of stabilization of the intermediate carbon radical by an adjacent sulphur substituent [62]. [Pg.170]

Dialkyl sulphones are not reducible at a mercury cathode. Aryl alkyl and diaryl sulphones are however reduced with cleavage of a carbon-sulphur bond. Polaro-graphic half-wave potentials for this process are given in Table 5.6. One-electron addition in aprotic media to phenyl methyl sulphone [66] and to diphenyl sulphone [67] leads in both cases to a delocalised radical-anion in which the sulphone grorqj can be described as contributing a vacant symmetrical dx-orbital to the conjugated system. Phenyl methyl sulphone radical-anion is prepared and characterised in liq-... [Pg.170]

Electrochemical reduction of aryl sulphones in methanol leads to cleavage of one carbon-sulphur bond in a two-electron process. Alkyl aryl sulphones with an electron donating substituent in the aryl ring give the arenesulphinic acid and an alkane [68, 69]. Methyl phenyl sulphone and alkyl aryl sulphones with an electron withdrawing substituent in the aryl ring are cleaved to the substituted arene and the alkylsulphinic acid [70], see Scheme 5.2. In addition, a bulky orfAo-substituent such as tert.-butyl favours cleavage to the arene and alkanesulphinic acid [71]. [Pg.171]


See other pages where Carbon sulphur is mentioned: [Pg.33]    [Pg.37]    [Pg.76]    [Pg.247]    [Pg.305]    [Pg.927]    [Pg.934]    [Pg.246]    [Pg.33]    [Pg.37]    [Pg.247]    [Pg.305]    [Pg.927]    [Pg.934]    [Pg.20]    [Pg.148]    [Pg.477]    [Pg.478]    [Pg.483]    [Pg.229]    [Pg.168]    [Pg.168]    [Pg.169]    [Pg.169]    [Pg.171]    [Pg.172]    [Pg.172]    [Pg.173]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.138 , Pg.139 ]




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