Mechanism of the oxidation of sulphides with sodium periodate
Abstract
The kinetics of the oxidation of RSAr, R2S, and (CH2)nS sulphides with NaIO4yielding sulphoxides were investigated in ethanol–water solutions, and the rate equation v=k2[sulphide][IO4–] was found to be valid. The observed substituent (ρ– 1.40 for YC6H4SMe; ρ*–1.06 and –0.60 for RSPh and R2S, respectively) and solvent effects (m 0.722 for MeSPh) are explained by an electrophilic attack of periodate oxygen on sulphide, leading to a polar transition state. The slight steric requirements of the reaction (δ 0.27 and 0.105 for RSPh and R2S, respectively) and the lack of solvent isotope effect exclude the participation of water in an SN2-type nucleophilic displacement on a sulphonium centre, which might be considered to have been formed from sulphide and periodate in a fast pre-equilibrium. A moderate anchimeric assistance was observed for the conversion of XC6H4SMe sulphides with o-X =CO2Me, CO2H, and CO2–(k2°/k2pca. 1). From the results it is concluded that oxidation proceeds by a one-step electrophilic oxygen transfer from IO4– to sulphide through a polar product-like transition state that is stabilized by a polar neighbouring group or by the increasing polarity of the medium.