Chloroiodomethane Explained

Chloroiodomethane is the halomethane with the formula is . It is a colorless liquid of use in organic synthesis.[1] Together with other iodomethanes, chloroiodomethane is produced by some microorganisms.[2]

Applications

Chloroiodomethane is used in cyclopropanation (Simmon-Smith reaction), where it often replaces diiodomethane because of higher yields and selectivity. It is also used in Mannich reaction, aminomethylation, epoxidation, ring opening and addition to terminal alkenes. It is a precursor to agent Ph3P=CHCl that can add a chloromethylene group (=CHCl).[1] It reacts with organolithium compounds to give chloromethyl lithium (ClCH2Li).[3]

Crystallography

It crystallizes orthorhombic crystal system with space group Pnma with lattice constants: a = 6.383, b = 6.706, c = 8.867 (.10−1 nm).[4]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Chloroiodomethane. Miyano. Sotaro. Friestad. Gregory K.. E-EROS Encyclopedia of Reagents for Organic Synthesis. 2008. 10.1002/047084289X.rc110.pub2. 978-0471936237.
  2. Production of free and organic iodine by Roseovarius spp.. Fuse. Hiroyuki. Inoue. Hiroyuki. Murakami. Katsuji. Takimura. Osamu. Yamaoka. Yukiho. FEMS Microbiology Letters. 2003. 229. 2. 189–94. 10.1016/S0378-1097(03)00839-5. 14680698. free.
  3. Chloromethyllithium. Donald S. Matteson. EEROS. 10.1002/047084289X.rc117. 2001. 0471936235.
  4. Torrie B. H. . Binbrek O. S. . von Dreele R. . 1993 . Crystal structure of chloroiodomethane . Mol. Phys. . 79 . 4 . 869–874(6) . 10.1080/00268979300101691 . 1993MolPh..79..869T .