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Author: Subject: I made a thiol in my garden
Adas
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biggrin.gif posted on 6-3-2013 at 07:03
I made a thiol in my garden


Hello guys! Today I was trying to make thioacetone (bad idea, I know) but I made a thiol instead. :D
I think that this experiment might be of some interest, since it is very easy to do in your own garden. Anybody can make thiols this way.

Here's what I did:

1. I prepared a test tube with acetone + HCl
2. I tried to light up a mixture of Al + S, but I failed. Even though, I dropped it into the test tube where the Al was slowly reacting with the HCl (and thus probably reducing the acetone?)
3. I made another Al + S mixture and lit it up with KNO3 + sugar.
4. I divided the product into smaller pieces to fit in the test tube.
5. I put them in the test tube and heated with lighter.
6. I was heating the test tube periodically.
7. At first, only H2S was coming off, but after some time, I realised that there was no more H2S, but rather a thiol smell.
8. After some more time, there was absolutely no H2S.

I think that I made quite a lot of it. I even gassed my house with it a little bit, so I had to get rid of it. :D

What are your thoughts?
I think that at first, the acetone has been reduced and then the IPA reacted with H2S, HCl was a catalyst.

Thanks for your time.




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[*] posted on 6-3-2013 at 09:37


Try replacing your carbonyl (acetone) with a simple alcohol, methanol. If your hypothesis is correct, you will end up with a gas smelling like it came directly out of tony sopranos ass. Careful, these thiols/mercaptans are highly toxic. Best of luck!:)
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[*] posted on 6-3-2013 at 11:16


Quote: Originally posted by SM2  
Careful, these thiols/mercaptans are highly toxic. Best of luck!:)


What the... :O I wasn't careful at all with it... What are the symptoms of poisoning? I didn't notice anything...

EDIT: "At very high concentrations it is highly toxic and affects the central nervous system." - Very high concentrations would be too unpleasant so I assume I am OK.

[Edited on 6-3-2013 by Adas]




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[*] posted on 12-7-2013 at 03:10
Phosphorus sulphide and thiol preparation


Hello guys.

My red P (and other chems) finally arrived from Poland. It is not bad quality.

This is good news for all of you that have red P and want to make some thiols.

Experiment:

I put some P into a test tube, then some sulfur. I heated it above a candle in order to make P4S10. When some of the mixture melted, there were some *pops* of flame coming out of the red P, but nothing spectacular. After this, the heat of the reaction melted all the sulfur, then it solidified and the reaction was complete. I heated the bottom of the test tube again to make sure it all reacted, but I just saw some tiny bubbles so I stopped it.

Next, I dropped one drop of acetone in the test tube, just to see if it makes any thioacetone, but I only observed a thiolic smell (maybe iPr-SH), as in my previous experiment.

Then I dropped in a few drops of ethanol. Immediately, ethane thiol was created.

I believe that the reaction is: P4S10 + 10 Et-OH -----> P4O10 + 10 Et-SH

I hope that I brought something positive to you by this experiment.
I got the idea from Wikipedia.




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[*] posted on 12-7-2013 at 04:10


Quote: Originally posted by Adas  
Then I dropped in a few drops of ethanol. Immediately, ethane thiol was created.

According to what kind of characterization?
Quote:
I believe that the reaction is: P4S10 + 10 Et-OH -----> P4O10 + 10 Et-SH

That reaction does not make much sense. What kind of a mechanism would allow for such an outcome? What is the reference?




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[*] posted on 12-7-2013 at 06:46


Quote:
Due to hydrolysis by atmospheric moisture, P4S10 evolves H2S, thus P4S10 is associated with a rotten egg odour. Aside from H2S, hydrolysis of P4S10 gives phosphoric acid:
P4S10 + 16 H2O → 4 H3PO4 + 10 H2S
Other mild nucleophiles react with P4S10, including alcohols and amines.


Quote:
In organic chemistry P4S10 is used as a thionation reagent.


All from the wikipedia article. Please read the reference more carefully the next time.

Thanks.




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[*] posted on 12-7-2013 at 08:28


Quote: Originally posted by Adas  
Please read the reference more carefully the next time.
:o Show some respect. <strong>Nicodem</strong> is not responsible for the poor quality of and lack of meaningful citation in your post. Wikipedia is <em>never</em> to be used as a primary source (coming from me, that's saying <em>a lot</em>;).

Just because the Wikipedia article makes a claim, doesn't mean your experiment follows said claim. What conclusive (not smell) evidence do you have that the expected reaction took place and produced the desired product? Also, don't flood the forum with multiple topics on the same subject.

[Edited on 7/12/13 by bfesser]




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[*] posted on 12-7-2013 at 08:45


Interesting...I love me some smelly molecules :P.



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[*] posted on 12-7-2013 at 09:59


I didn't mean to say anything disrecpectful, sorry. I wasn't able find any better refference. But for your question: "What conclusive (not smell) evidence do you have that the expected reaction took place and produced the desired product?" - What else could it be? Ethanol has got only ONE reactive group (-OH). I know what thiols smell like. It couldn't be anything else. If yes, please correct me.

To my experiment: After letting it stand for a while, I poured in some H2O2, the solution turned milky with oil floating on the top (according to Wiki, the oil was diethyl disulfide). After some time, however, the hydrogen peroxide started reacting with the unreacted phosphorus and all the thiol has been boiled out of the solution, while the oil was still present. It smelled like rotten cabbage or similar. Definitely different from the thiol.

<!-- bfesser_edit_tag -->[<a href="u2u.php?action=send&username=bfesser">bfesser</a>: removed unnecessary quote(s)]

[Edited on 7/12/13 by bfesser]




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[*] posted on 12-7-2013 at 10:09


A good starting place is the list of <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phosphorus_pentasulfide#References" target="_blank">references</a> <img src="../scipics/_wiki.png" /> at the bottom of <em>every</em> Wikipedia article.

<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Methanethiol" target="_blank">Methanethiol</a> <img src="../scipics/_wiki.png" /> smells like rotten cabbage.
<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethanethiol#Odor" target="_blank">Ethanethiol</a> <img src="../scipics/_wiki.png" /> has been described as smelling like " leeks, onions or cooked cabbage, but is quite distinct."

[Edited on 7/12/13 by bfesser]




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[*] posted on 12-7-2013 at 10:31


Quote: Originally posted by Adas  
All from the wikipedia article. Please read the reference more carefully the next time.

It was because I read that more carefully than you, that I asked you for the reference. There is nothing in that Wikipedia entry that supports your claims about the reaction equation that you gave above. It says that P4S10 can be used as a thionation reagent. You say that your attempt at the thionation reaction failed (did you even follow a published procedure at all?). Then you say that it reacted with the ethanol trough an unreferenced reaction that seems anything but likely. I'm not saying that some small amount of ethanthiol can't form by the reaction of P4S10 with ethanol under proper reaction conditions, but I can't see how that could be the main product under conditions you applied, and even much less how this could ever occur trough such an unlikely reaction as you claimed.
Quote:
Other mild nucleophiles react with P4S10, including alcohols and amines.

Where does it say it forms ethanthiol with ethanol?
Quote:
I wasn't able find any better refference. But for your question: "What conclusive (not smell) evidence do you have that the expected reaction took place and produced the desired product?" - What else could it be?

This is a science forum. You can't come here and insult us with such anti-scientific declarations like: "What else could it be?". The scientific method is not some sort of masturbation! Leave the wishful thinking for the more appropriate fantasies.
Quote:
To my experiment: After letting it stand for a while, I poured in some H2O2, the solution turned milky with oil floating on the top (according to Wiki, the oil was diethyl disulfide).

Again you are blatantly abusing and manipulating Wikipedia. It says nothing about your "oil floating on the top" being diethyl disulfide. Start using proper references, not some secondary sources, and use them correctly. Don't make up claims that are not there.




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[*] posted on 12-7-2013 at 10:43


So maybe I didn't understand the Wiki articles well enough?

What if somebody came with a new discovery, but couldn't find any references just because it was new? I was just trying to share my experiments and experiences.

Some people post reactions that are absolutely wrong without reference, and even they do not receive such critics as I do. I don't understand this..

I am trying to use my knowledge and logics in figuring out my reactions, not just blind references, but I am starting to think that this forum just requires the references. I am trying to do things in different ways as other people do, and you are criticising it. Sorry for using my brain and creativity too much.

[Edited on 12-7-2013 by Adas]




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[*] posted on 12-7-2013 at 11:38


Quote: Originally posted by Adas  
So maybe I didn't understand the Wiki articles well enough?

Maybe you should make an effort and read the articles where there is actual support for claims and ideas. Relying on secondary literature is naive, particularly such fragmented reviews like those on Wikipedia. Wikipedia reviews are useful for pursuing knowledge because you can follow the references given there, but they are not useful as source of knowledge itself.
Quote:
What if somebody came with a new discovery, but couldn't find any references just because it was new? I was just trying to share my experiments and experiences.

Well, that is easy. First you need to prove that you came up with a discovery, which means you need to find a whole lot of references on the topic. Next, chemistry is an experimental science which means that its most authoritative scientific reference is the experimental. This is why primary literature needs to include the experimental data in order to classify as such.
The experimental is a detailed description of the experiment that includes the exact procedure written in such a way to be easily reproduced by a person skilled in the art. This must then be followed by all the required evidence in support of any conclusion. In practice this evidence most commonly consists of the characterization data (analytical data, derivatizations data, physical properties, organoleptic observations, etc.) and the relevant measurements of physical changes.
Quote:
Some people post reactions that are absolutely wrong without reference, and even they do not receive such critics as I do. I don't understand this..

Some people are just not worth the effort.
Quote:
I am trying to use my knowledge and logics in figuring out my reactions, not just blind references, but I am starting to think that this forum just requires the references. I am trying to do things in different ways as other people do, and you are criticising it. Sorry for using my brain and creativity too much.

Creativity without rules is not creative at all. Just think about it, consider your limitations and tell me how on earth can you figure out what is going on in your reactions without references? Science is a building-up process, not a digging-your-head-in-the-dirt process.




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[*] posted on 12-7-2013 at 18:24


You probably made some thiols afterall, but the question is 'how much did you make?'. These things are noticeable even at the tiniest amounts, and saying any useful amount was produced in this process, judging only by the smell of the reaction mixture, does not sound very wise. Especially when you don't even have a valid explanation to how it was formed.
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