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Sulfur–Sulfur Bond Construction

Topics in Current Chemistry, 2018
Disulfide, as a common structural motif, has been frequently used in pharmaceuticals, nature products, and chemical biology. This chapter focuses on the methodologies that were reported recently for the synthesis of disulfide-containing compounds with particular emphasis on the synthesis of unsymmetrical disulfides.
Ming Wang, Xuefeng Jiang
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Sulfur revisited

Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology, 1988
Sulfur is a time-honored therapeutic agent useful in a variety of dermatologic disorders. Its keratolytic action is due to formation of hydrogen sulfide through a reaction that depends upon direct interaction between sulfur particles and keratinocytes.
A N, Lin, R J, Reimer, D M, Carter
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Sulfur and Sulfuric Acid

2007
Sulfur is one of the few elements that is found in its elemental form in nature. Typical sulfur deposits occur in sedimentary limestone/gypsum formations, in limestone/anhydrite formations associated with salt domes, or in volcanic rock [1]. A yellow solid at room temperature, sulfur becomes progressively lighter in color at lower temperatures and is ...
Gerard E. d’Aquin, Robert C. Fell
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Nickel mediated sulfur–selenium and sulfur–sulfur bond formation

Chemical Communications, 1999
Electrophilic addition of the PhSeCl to a nickel dithiolate yields S,S′-bis(phenylselenenyl-N,N′-bis(mercaptoethyl)-1,5-diazacyclooctane nickel(II) dichloride and a dimeric, intermolecular bis-disulfide which results from ligand oxidation.
Chia-Huei Lai   +2 more
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Sulfur Metabolism in Phototrophic Sulfur Bacteria

2008
Phototrophic sulfur bacteria are characterized by oxidizing various inorganic sulfur compounds for use as electron donors in carbon dioxide fixation during anoxygenic photosynthetic growth. These bacteria are divided into the purple sulfur bacteria (PSB) and the green sulfur bacteria (GSB). They utilize various combinations of sulfide, elemental sulfur,
Frigaard, Niels-Ulrik, Dahl, Christiane
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Properties of Sulfur‐Sulfur Bonds

Angewandte Chemie International Edition in English, 1975
AbstractSS bonds are extraordinarily flexible and have properties that are observed only on isolated occasions for other homonuclear bonds: the bond lengths very between 1.8 and 3.0Å, the bond angles between 90 and 180° and the dihedral angles between 0 and 180°; the bond energies amount to up to 430 kJ/mol.
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