Related links
    Full-text PDF
    Reprints and Permissions

Canadian access to full text made available through the Depository Services Program

Can. J. Chem. 44(7): 819–828 (1966)  |  doi:10.1139/v66-117  |  © 1966 NRC Canada  

THE REACTION OF PHENYLMETHANESULFONYL CHLORIDE WITH TERTIARY AMINES: FORMATION OF GEOMETRICAL ISOMERS ABOUT A CARBON–SULFUR DOUBLE BOND


J. F. King and T. Durst


Abstract: In methylene chloride or ether solution, phenylmethanesulfonyl chloride reacts with triethylamine to give a mixture consisting primarily of trans-stilbene and cis diphenylethylene sulfone. In cyclohexane the same reagents yield principally a material which is shown to be a roughly 2:1 mixture of cis- and trans-oxythiobenzoyl chlorides (I and II, respectively). The latter compounds represent the first examples of geometrical isomerism about a double bond in which one of the atoms of the double bond is outside the first short period of the Periodic Table.

Résumé : non disponible

Date modified: 2009-07-10
Top of page