An in-depth technical overview of properties, synthesis, applications, handling, and safety considerations
Benzenesulfinic acid sodium salt—commonly encountered in research and industrial chemistry—is a versatile organosulfur compound with distinct reactivity and utility in synthesis. Its chemistry bridges functional group transformations, organometallic reactivity, and application in advanced materials.
Chemical Name: Sodium benzenesulfinate
Formula: C₆H₅SO₂Na
Molar Mass: ~174.18 g/mol
Structure: A benzene ring substituted with a sulfinic acid group (–SO₂H) that is deprotonated and stabilized as a sodium salt.
Physical Form: Typically a white to off-white crystalline solid.
Solubility: Soluble in polar solvents such as water, alcohols (methanol, ethanol), and dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO); limited solubility in nonpolar solvents.
The sulfinic acid functional group (–SO₂H) is a strong nucleophile and reducing agent due to the electron-rich sulfur center; as a salt, it is stabilized and more manageable than the free acid.
Common laboratory preparation routes include:
Reduction of Sulfonyl Chlorides:
Starting from benzenesulfonyl chloride (PhSO₂Cl), a controlled reduction (e.g., using Na₂S₂O₄ or Zn/H⁺) generates PhSO₂H which is immediately neutralized with NaOH to form the sodium salt.
From Diazonium Salts:
A Sandmeyer-type sulfinylation: diazonium derivatives of aniline are treated with sulfur dioxide followed by NaHSO₃ → yields benzenesulfinate salts under appropriate conditions.
Direct Sulfinylation of Aromatics:
Methods using sulfinating agents like SOCl₂ under specific catalysts can introduce the sulfinic function directly onto benzene derivatives.
Quality considerations:
Synthesis must control oxidation (to sulfone) and over-reduction (to thiol), as these by-products significantly affect downstream use.
Benzenesulfinic acid sodium salt readily participates in nucleophilic aromatic substitution (SNAr) on activated aryl halides:
Ar–X + PhSO₂Na → Ar–SO₂Ph + NaX
This forms diaryl sulfones—valuable in pharmaceuticals and materials chemistry.
Sulfinates are reducing agents; they can reduce certain oxidative species such as nitro groups under controlled conditions.
They can undergo oxidation to sulfones (R–SO₂–R′) or further to sulfonates (R–SO₃–) in the presence of strong oxidants.
Under radical-initiating conditions (heat, light, or initiators like AIBN), sulfinates can generate sulfonyl radicals useful in radical addition chemistry.
PhSO₂Na → PhSO₂• + e⁻
PhSO₂• + alkene → addition product
These radical pathways allow C–S bond formation and functionalization of alkenes and alkynes.
Reaction with electrophiles (e.g., alkyl halides) can produce sulfinate esters:
R–X + PhSO₂Na → R–O–SO–Ph + NaX
Similarly, coupling with amines under activation yields sulfinamides.
Benzenesulfinate intermediates enable construction of:
Diaryl sulfones – common scaffolds in antibiotics and anticancer agents.
Sulfinamide ligands – chiral auxiliaries in asymmetric synthesis.
In polymer chemistry, sulfone linkages improve:
Thermal stability
Mechanical strength
Solvent resistance
Used in high-performance polymers like poly(arylene sulfones).
Serves as a ligand source or substrate in transition-metal catalyzed coupling reactions (e.g., Pd, Ni catalysis).
Bound to metals, sulfinates can influence selectivity and reactivity.
Used to reduce activated nitro groups or serve as a temporary protecting group in multifunctional molecules.
The ease of oxidation allows strategic “protect and deprotect” steps.
Store in a cool, dry, and well-ventilated environment.
Keep sealed to prevent moisture absorption and oxidation.
When used in solution, maintain inert atmosphere (N₂ or Ar) if air-sensitive reactions are anticipated.
Ensure proper pH control: overly acidic conditions can lead to disproportionation; overly basic media can promote side reactions.
Can be irritating to skin, eyes, and respiratory system.
Dust may be hazardous if inhaled.
Reacts with strong oxidizers—may pose fire hazard upon rapid oxidation.
Gloves (nitrile or neoprene)
Eye protection (safety goggles)
Lab coat; work in a fume hood
Neutralize and dispose of according to local regulations for hazardous sulfur compounds.
Avoid release into drains; oxidize under controlled conditions before aqueous disposal.
| Issue | Possible Cause | Solution |
| Low yield in SNAr | Competing oxidation, poor nucleophilicity | Use dry solvent, elevated temp, catalyst |
| Oxidation to sulfone | Air exposure | Inert atmosphere, antioxidants |
| Inconsistent reactivity | Impure reagent | Purify by recrystallization |
