English
Noun
- Any of a class of
unsaturated heterocyclic compounds containing a ring of three carbon atoms, a sulphur and an nitrogen atom; especially the
simplest one,
C3H3SN.
Thiazole, or 1,3-thiazole, is a clear to pale
yellow flammable liquid with a
pyridine-like odor and the
molecular formula C3H3NS. It is a 5-membered ring, in which two of
the vertices of the ring are
nitrogen and
sulfur, and the other three are
carbons .
Thiazole is used for manufacturing
biocides,
fungicides,
pharmaceuticals, and
dyes.
Thiazoles and thiazolium salts
Thiazoles are a class of
organic
compounds related to
azoles with a common thiazole
functional
group. Thiazoles are aromatic.
The thiazole
moiety is a crucial part of
vitamin B1 (
thiamine)
and
epothilone. Other
important thiazoles are
benzothiazoles, for
example, the firefly chemical
luciferin.
Thiazoles are structurally similar to
imidazoles. Like imidazoles,
thiazoles have been used to give N-S
free
carbenes and
transition metal carbene complexes.
The amino atom can be
alkylated to create a
thiazolium cation; thiazolium salts are catalysts in the
Stetter
reaction and the
Benzoin
condensation.
Thiazole
dyes are used for dying
cotton.
Oxazoles are
related compounds, with sulfur replaced by oxygen. Thiazoles are
well represented in
biomolecules; oxazoles are
not.
Organic synthesis
Various laboratory methods exist for the
organic
synthesis of thiazoles.
Reactions
Thiazoles are characterized by larger pi-electron
delocalization
than the corresponding
oxazoles and have therefore
greater
aromaticity.
This is evidenced by the position of the ring protons in
proton NMR
(between 7.27 and 8.77 ppm), clearly indicating a strong
diamagnetic
ring current.
The calculated pi-electron density marks C5 as
the primary electrophilic site, and C2 as the nucleophilic
site.
The reactivity of a thiazole can be summarized as
follows:
- 2-(trimethylsiliyl)thiazole (with a trimethylsilyl group in
the 2-position) is a stable substitute and reacts with a range of
electrophiles such as aldehydes, acyl halides,
and ketenes
- Thiazoles can react in cycloadditions, but in
general at high temperatures due to favorable aromatic
stabilization of the reactant; Diels-Alder
reactions with alkynes are followed by extrusion
of sulfur, and the endproduct is a pyridine; in one study , a very
mild reaction of a 2-(dimethylamino)thiazole with dimethyl
acetylenedicarboxylate (DMAD) to a pyridine was found to proceed
through a zwitterionic intermediate
in a formal [2+2]cycloaddition to a cyclobutene, then to a
1,3-thiazepine in an 4-electron electrocyclic
ring openening and then to a 7-thia-2-azanorcaradiene in an
6-electron electrocyclic ring, closing before extruding the sulfur
atom.
References
thiazole in German: Thiazol
thiazole in Italian: Tiazolo
thiazole in Latvian: Tiazols
thiazole in Japanese: チアゾール
thiazole in Polish: Tiazol
thiazole in Turkish: Tiyazol
thiazole in Chinese: 噻唑