Chemistry:Tetrasulfur tetranitride

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Tetrasulfur tetranitride
Stereo, skeletal formula of tetrasulfur tetranitride with some measurements
Ball and stick model of tetrasulfur tetranitride
Space-filling model of tetrasulfur tetranitride
Except where otherwise noted, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C [77 °F], 100 kPa).
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| IUPACName = Tetrasulfur tetranitride | SystematicName = 1,3,5,7-tetrathia-2,4,6,8-tetraazacyclooctan-2,4,6,8-tetrayl | Section1 = ! colspan=2 style="background: #f8eaba; text-align: center;" |Identifiers

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3D model (JSmol)

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|- | Section2 = ! colspan=2 style="background: #f8eaba; text-align: center;" |Properties

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| S
4
N
4

|- | Molar mass

| 184.287 g/mol

|- | Appearance | Vivid orange, opaque crystals |-


| Melting point | 187 °C (369 °F; 460 K)

|- | Section3 = | Section4 = | Section5 = | Section6 = }} Tetrasulfur tetranitride is an inorganic compound with the formula S
4
N
4
. This gold-poppy coloured solid is the most important binary sulfur nitride, which are compounds that contain only the elements sulfur and nitrogen. It is a precursor to many S-N compounds and has attracted wide interest for its unusual structure and bonding.[1][2]

Nitrogen and sulfur have similar electronegativities. When the properties of atoms are so highly similar, they often form extensive families of covalently bonded structures and compounds. Indeed, a large number of S-N and S-NH compounds are known with S
4
N
4
as their parent.

Structure

S
4
N
4
adopts an unusual “extreme cradle” structure, with D2d point group symmetry. It can be viewed as a derivative of a (hypothetical) eight-membered ring (or more simply a 'deformed' eight-membered ring) of alternating sulfur and nitrogen atoms. The pairs of sulfur atoms across the ring are separated by 2.586 Å, resulting in a cage-like structure as determined by single crystal X-ray diffraction.[3] The nature of the transannular S–S interactions remains a matter of investigation because it is significantly shorter than the sum of the van der Waal's distances[4] but has been explained in the context of molecular orbital theory.[1] One pair of the transannular S atoms have valence 4, and the other pair of the transannular S atoms have valence 2.[citation needed] The bonding in S
4
N
4
is considered to be delocalized, which is indicated by the fact that the bond distances between neighboring sulfur and nitrogen atoms are nearly identical. S
4
N
4
has been shown to co-crystallize with benzene and the C
60
molecule.[5]

Properties

S
4
N
4
is stable to air. It is, however, unstable in the thermodynamic sense with a positive enthalpy of formation of +460 kJ/mol. This endothermic enthalpy of formation originates in the difference in energy of S
4
N
4
compared to its highly stable decomposition products:

2 S
4
N
4
→ 4 N
2
+ S
8

Because one of its decomposition products is a gas, S
4
N
4
can be used as an explosive.[1] Purer samples tend to be more explosive. Small samples can be detonated by striking with a hammer. S
4
N
4
is thermochromic, changing from pale yellow below −30 °C to orange at room temperature to deep red above 100 °C.[1]

Synthesis

S
4
N
4
was first prepared in 1835 by M. Gregory by the reaction of disulfur dichloride with ammonia,[6] a process that has been optimized:[7]

6 S
2
Cl
2
+ 16 NH
3
→ S
4
N
4
+ S
8
+ 12 [NH
4
]Cl

Coproducts of this reaction include heptasulfur imide (S
7
NH
) and elemental sulfur. A related synthesis employs [NH
4
]Cl
instead:[1]

4 [NH
4
]Cl + 6 S
2
Cl
2
→ S
4
N
4
+ 16 HCl + S
8

An alternative synthesis entails the use of (((CH
3
)
3
Si)
2
N)
2
S
as a precursor with pre-formed S–N bonds. (((CH
3
)
3
Si)
2
N)
2
S
is prepared by the reaction of lithium bis(trimethylsilyl)amide and SCl
2
.

2 ((CH
3
)
3
Si)
2
NLi + SCl
2
→ (((CH
3
)
3
Si)
2
N)
2
S + 2 LiCl

The (((CH
3
)
3
Si)
2
N)
2
S
reacts with the combination of SCl
2
and SO
2
Cl
2
to form S
4
N
4
, trimethylsilyl chloride, and sulfur dioxide:[8]

2 (((CH
3
)
3
Si)
2
N)
2
S + 2 SCl
2
+ 2 SO
2
Cl
2
→ S
4
N
4
+ 8 (CH
3
)
3
SiCl + 2 SO
2

Acid-base reactions

S
4
N
4
 · BF
3

S
4
N
4
serves as a Lewis base by binding through nitrogen to strongly Lewis acidic compounds such as SbCl
5
and SO
3
. The cage is distorted in these adducts.[1]

S
4
N
4
+ SbCl
5
→ S
4
N
4
 · SbCl
5
S
4
N
4
+ SO
3
→ S
4
N
4
 · SO
3

The reaction of [Pt
2
Cl
4
(P(CH
3
)
2
Ph)
2
]
with S
4
N
4
is reported to form a complex where a sulfur forms a dative bond to the metal. This compound upon standing is isomerised to a complex in which a nitrogen atom forms the additional bond to the metal centre.

It is protonated by H[BF
4
]
to form a tetrafluoroborate salt:

S
4
N
4
+ H[BF
4
] → [S
4
N
4
H]+
[BF
4
]

The soft Lewis acid CuCl forms a coordination polymer:[1]

n S
4
N
4
+ n CuCl → (S
4
N
4
)
n
-μ-(–Cu–Cl–)
n

Dilute NaOH hydrolyzes S
4
N
4
as follows, yielding thiosulfate and trithionate:[1]

2 S
4
N
4
+ 6 OH
+ 9 H
2
O → S
2
O2−
3
+ 2 S
3
O2−
6
+ 8 NH
3

More concentrated base yields sulfite:

S
4
N
4
+ 6 OH
+ 3 H
2
O → S
2
O2−
3
+ 2 SO2−
3
+ 4 NH
3

Metal complexes

S
4
N
4
reacts with metal complexes. The cage remains intact in some cases but in other cases, it is degraded.[2][9] S
4
N
4
reacts with Vaska's complex ([Ir(Cl)(CO)(PPh
3
)
2
]
in an oxidative addition reaction to form a six coordinate iridium complex where the S
4
N
4
binds through two sulfur atoms and one nitrogen atom.

S
4
N
4
as a precursor to other S-N compounds

Many S-N compounds are prepared from S
4
N
4
.[10] Reaction with piperidine generates [S
4
N
5
]
:

24 S
4
N
4
+ 32 C
5
H
10
NH → 8 [C
5
H
10
NH
2
]+
[S
4
N
5
]
+ 8 (C
5
H
10
N)
2
S + 3 S
8
+ 8 N
2

A related cation is also known, i.e. [S
4
N
5
]+
.

Treatment with tetramethylammonium azide produces the heterocycle [S
3
N
3
]
:

8 S
4
N
4
+ 8 [(CH
3
)
4
N]+
[N
3
]
→ 8 [(CH
3
)
4
N]+
[S
3
N
3
]
+ S
8
+ 16 N
2

Cyclo-[S
3
N
3
]
has 10 pi-electrons.

In a related reaction, the use of the bis(triphenylphosphine)iminium azide gives a salt containing the blue [NS
4
]
anion:[10]

4 S
4
N
4
+ 2 [PPN]+
[N
3
]
→ 2 [PPN]+
[NS
4
]
+ S
8
+ 10 N
2

The anion [NS
4
]
has a chain structure described using the resonance [S=S=N–S–S
] ↔ [
S–S–N=S=S]
.

S
4
N
4
reacts with electron-poor alkynes.[11]

Chlorination of S
4
N
4
gives thiazyl chloride.

Passing gaseous S
4
N
4
over silver metal yields the low temperature superconductor polythiazyl or polysulfurnitride (transition temperature (0.26±0.03) K[12]), often simply called "(SN)x". In the conversion, the silver first becomes sulfided, and the resulting Ag
2
S
catalyzes the conversion of the S
4
N
4
into the four-membered ring S
2
N
2
, which readily polymerizes.[1]

S
4
N
4
+ 8 Ag → 4 Ag
2
S + 2 N
2
x S
4
N
4
→ (SN)
4x

Related compounds

Safety

S
4
N
4
is shock-sensitive. Purer samples are more shock-sensitive than those contaminated with elemental sulfur.[7]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 Greenwood, N. N.; Earnshaw, A. (1997). Chemical Elements (2nd ed.). Boston, MA: Butterworth-Heinemann. pp. 721–725. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 Chivers, T. (2004). A Guide To Chalcogen-Nitrogen Chemistry. Singapore: World Scientific Publishing. ISBN 981-256-095-5. 
  3. Sharma, B. D.; Donohue, J. (1963). "The Crystal and Molecular Structure of Sulfur Nitride, S4N4". Acta Crystallographica 16 (9): 891–897. doi:10.1107/S0365110X63002401. 
  4. Rzepa, H. S.; Woollins, J. D. (1990). "A PM3 SCF-MO Study of the Structure and Bonding in the Cage Systems S4N4 and S4N4X (X = N+, N, S, N2S, P+, C, Si, B and Al)". Polyhedron 9 (1): 107–111. doi:10.1016/S0277-5387(00)84253-9. 
  5. Konarev, D. V.; Lyubovskaya, R. N.; Drichko, N. V. et al. (2000). "Donor-Acceptor Complexes of Fullerene C60 with Organic and Organometallic Donors". Journal of Materials Chemistry 10 (4): 803–818. doi:10.1039/a907106g. 
  6. Jolly, W. L.; Lipp, S. A. (1971). "Reaction of Tetrasulfur Tetranitride with Sulfuric Acid". Inorganic Chemistry 10 (1): 33–38. doi:10.1021/ic50095a008. https://escholarship.org/uc/item/7xj1q0zf. 
  7. 7.0 7.1 Villena-Blanco, M. et al. (1967). S. Y. Tyree Jr. ed. "Tetrasulfur Tetranitride, S4N4". Inorganic Syntheses 9: 98–102. doi:10.1002/9780470132401.ch26. 
  8. Maaninen, A.; Shvari, J.; Laitinen, R. S.; Chivers, T (2002). Coucouvanis, Dimitri. ed. "Compounds of General Interest". Inorganic Syntheses 33: 196–199. doi:10.1002/0471224502.ch4. ISBN 9780471208259. 
  9. Kelly, P. F.; Slawin, A. M. Z.; Williams, D. J.; Woollins, J. D. (1992). "Caged explosives: Metal-Stabilized Chalcogen Nitrides". Chemical Society Reviews 21 (4): 245–252. doi:10.1039/CS9922100245. 
  10. 10.0 10.1 Bojes, J. et al. (1989). Allcock, H. R.. ed. "Binary Cyclic Nitrogen-Sulfur Anions". Inorganic Syntheses 25: 30–35. doi:10.1002/9780470132562.ch7. ISBN 9780470132562. 
  11. Dunn, P. J.; Rzepa, H. S. (1987). "The Reaction Between Tetrasulphur Tetranitride (S4N4) and Electron-deficient Alkynes. A Molecular Orbital Study". Journal of the Chemical Society, Perkin Transactions 2 1987 (11): 1669–1670. doi:10.1039/p29870001669. 
  12. Greene, R. L.; Street, G. B.; Suter, L. J. (1975). "Superconductivity in Polysulfur Nitride (SN)x". Physical Review Letters 34 (10): 577–579. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.34.577. Bibcode1975PhRvL..34..577G. 
Salts and covalent derivatives of the nitride ion
NH3 He(N2)11
Li3N Be3N2 BN β-C3N4
g-C3N4
N2 NxOy NF3 Ne
Na3N Mg3N2 AlN Si3N4 PN
P3N5
SxNy
SN
S4N4
NCl3 Ar
K3N Ca3N2 ScN TiN VN CrN
Cr2N
MnxNy FexNy CoN Ni3N CuN Zn3N2 GaN Ge3N4 As Se NBr3 Kr
Rb3N Sr3N2 YN ZrN NbN β-Mo2N Tc Ru Rh PdN Ag3N CdN InN Sn Sb Te NI3 Xe
Cs3N Ba3N2   Hf3N4 TaN WN Re Os Ir Pt Au Hg3N2 TlN Pb BiN Po At Rn
Fr3N Ra3N   Rf Db Sg Bh Hs Mt Ds Rg Cn Nh Fl Mc Lv Ts Og
La CeN Pr Nd Pm Sm Eu GdN Tb Dy Ho Er Tm Yb Lu
Ac Th Pa UN Np Pu Am Cm Bk Cf Es Fm Md No Lr