[go: up one dir, main page]

US2414035A - Copper compounds of mercaptans derived from camphene - Google Patents

Copper compounds of mercaptans derived from camphene Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2414035A
US2414035A US440256A US44025642A US2414035A US 2414035 A US2414035 A US 2414035A US 440256 A US440256 A US 440256A US 44025642 A US44025642 A US 44025642A US 2414035 A US2414035 A US 2414035A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
camphene
copper
derived
mercaptan
compounds
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US440256A
Inventor
Arthur L Fox
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
EIDP Inc
Original Assignee
EI Du Pont de Nemours and Co
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by EI Du Pont de Nemours and Co filed Critical EI Du Pont de Nemours and Co
Priority to US440256A priority Critical patent/US2414035A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2414035A publication Critical patent/US2414035A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C07ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
    • C07CACYCLIC OR CARBOCYCLIC COMPOUNDS
    • C07C321/00Thiols, sulfides, hydropolysulfides or polysulfides
    • C07C321/22Thiols, sulfides, hydropolysulfides, or polysulfides having thio groups bound to carbon atoms of rings other than six-membered aromatic rings
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C10PETROLEUM, GAS OR COKE INDUSTRIES; TECHNICAL GASES CONTAINING CARBON MONOXIDE; FUELS; LUBRICANTS; PEAT
    • C10MLUBRICATING COMPOSITIONS; USE OF CHEMICAL SUBSTANCES EITHER ALONE OR AS LUBRICATING INGREDIENTS IN A LUBRICATING COMPOSITION
    • C10M1/00Liquid compositions essentially based on mineral lubricating oils or fatty oils; Their use as lubricants
    • C10M1/08Liquid compositions essentially based on mineral lubricating oils or fatty oils; Their use as lubricants with additives
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C07ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
    • C07CACYCLIC OR CARBOCYCLIC COMPOUNDS
    • C07C2602/00Systems containing two condensed rings
    • C07C2602/36Systems containing two condensed rings the rings having more than two atoms in common
    • C07C2602/42Systems containing two condensed rings the rings having more than two atoms in common the bicyclo ring system containing seven carbon atoms
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C10PETROLEUM, GAS OR COKE INDUSTRIES; TECHNICAL GASES CONTAINING CARBON MONOXIDE; FUELS; LUBRICANTS; PEAT
    • C10MLUBRICATING COMPOSITIONS; USE OF CHEMICAL SUBSTANCES EITHER ALONE OR AS LUBRICATING INGREDIENTS IN A LUBRICATING COMPOSITION
    • C10M2219/00Organic non-macromolecular compounds containing sulfur, selenium or tellurium as ingredients in lubricant compositions
    • C10M2219/08Thiols; Sulfides; Polysulfides; Mercaptals
    • C10M2219/082Thiols; Sulfides; Polysulfides; Mercaptals containing sulfur atoms bound to acyclic or cycloaliphatic carbon atoms
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C10PETROLEUM, GAS OR COKE INDUSTRIES; TECHNICAL GASES CONTAINING CARBON MONOXIDE; FUELS; LUBRICANTS; PEAT
    • C10NINDEXING SCHEME ASSOCIATED WITH SUBCLASS C10M RELATING TO LUBRICATING COMPOSITIONS
    • C10N2010/00Metal present as such or in compounds
    • C10N2010/02Groups 1 or 11

Definitions

  • This invention relates to new and valuable copper compounds and more particularly to the copper compounds of mercaptans derived from camphene.
  • the copper compounds of mercaptans derived from camphene which may be prepared by reacting upon mercaptans derived from camphene with copper or copper salts show ood solubility in lubricating oils and because of their high copper content are useful in decreasing the sludge formation and lacquering properties of the oil and in decreasing bearing corrosion in those cases where the oils tend to corrode alloy bearings.
  • These copper compounds of men captans derived from camphene furthermore, do not have the strong tinctorial properties of the previously suggested compounds but instead color organic solvents and oils when dissolved therein in light yellow to red and brown shades, depending upon their purity, which are not objectionable.
  • These new copper containing compounds are made by a simple and economical process directly from camphene, which is a relatively inexpensive and readily available intermediate.
  • the compounds of the present invention may be prepared by reacting camphene with sulfur at temperatures of from to 200 C., treating the resulting camphene-sulfur complex With hydrogen in the presence of a hydrogenation catalyst, that is active in the presenc of sulfur, to form the mercaptan, reacting the mercaptan derived from camphene with a copper salt, preferably under conditions which maintain the copper salt in a cuprous state, and isolating the copper compound of the mercaptan (copper mercaptidel or extracting it from the reaction mass with a solvent such as organic solvents or lubricating oil.
  • the sulfurization and hydrogenation may be carried out simultaneously in the presence or in the absence of an organic solvent.
  • the formation of the copper compound may be eiiected directly in the organic solvent solution of the mercaptan or after isolation of the mercaptan, all as more particularly described in copending application Ser. No. 440,253, filed of even date herewith.
  • a mercaptan derived from camphene may also be formed from camphene b the addition of hydrogen sulfide in the presence of sulfuric acid, phosphoric acid or other catalyst as more particularly described in U. S. P. 2,076,875.
  • the mercaptans may be reacted with the copper salt or with the metal itself in the presence of air, although the exclusion of air from such reaction is preferred.
  • cupric salts tend to oxidizethe mercaptan to the disulfide
  • the copperization of the mercaptan is preferably carried out with cuprous salts in the presence of a reducing agent or under conditions whereby the copper is maintained in the cuprous state.
  • a preferred method for producing the copper salt is by adding an organic solvent solution of the mercaptan derived from camphene to an ammoniacal solution of a cuprous salt, such as cuprous chloride or cuprous acetate, in which there has been dissolved a reducing agent such as sodium hydrosulfite.
  • This particular reducing agent not only maintains the copper in the cuprous state but it also tends to reduce any disulfide that might be formed in the reaction to the mercaptan whereby the yield of the copper mercaptide derived from the camphene is materially increased.
  • the new copper mercaptides derived fromcamphene may be dissolved directly in lubricating oil by stirring with or without heating or they may be dissolved in an organic solvent for use as a stock solution in treating lubricating oils.
  • the copper salt of mercaptans derived from camphene are soluble in mineral oils, and hydrocarbon solvents such as benzene, hexane, paraflin oil,
  • Example 547 parts of camphene (having a distilling range of 157.3 C. to 160.1 C. with 80% distilling between 158.0 C. and l59.1 C., a refractive index of N20 1.4950 a freezing point of 37.9 C. and a specific gravity of 0.8366) and 249 parts of sulfur are heated in a steel autoclave, provided with agitation, at 150 C. for 10 hours under autogenous pressure.
  • the condensation mixture is cooled to room temperature, and 40 parts of reduced nickel catalyst are added.
  • the mixture then is hydrogenated at 150 C. and under a pressure of 600-700 lbs. per sq. in. until hydrogen absorption is complete as shown by absence of further pressure drops.
  • the crude product is filtered to remove the catalyst, and fractionally distilled at 25 mm. mercury pressure to obtain an essentially pure mercaptan with a boiling range of 115-118 C., a melting point of 445 C. and a sulfur content of 18.37%, and a higher boiling derivative having a boiling range of 122- 123.5 C., which is liquid at ordinary temperatures and contains 18.85% of sulfur.
  • cuprous chloride In a reaction vessel in which the air has been displaced with nitrogen, 13.4 parts of cuprous chloride are dissolved in 203 parts of 8.7% aqueous ammonia solution. Any blue color from cupric salts present in the cuprous chloride is removed by slowly adding a small quantity of a reducing agent such as sodium hydrosulfite. 20.8 parts of crude mercaptan, as obtained above prior to distillation, dissolved in 36 parts of ether (or kerosene) are added to the solution and the mixture is agitated for two hours under a nitrogen atmosphere. A reflux condenser or external cooling is preferably employed as the heat of reaction is often sufiicient to vaporize a portion of the ether.
  • a reducing agent such as sodium hydrosulfite
  • the ether layer (upper) is decanted from the aqueous layer (lower) and filtered to remove traces of insoluble material.
  • the ether fraction is then evaporated under vacuum at room temperature, giving a dark red resinous residue which on trituration with 80 parts of dry acetone yields a bright yellow ether soluble acetone insoluble powder which melts at 138 C. and has a sulfur content of 14.14% and a copper content of 26.22%.
  • the copper mercaptide of the distilled fraction of the mercaptan derived from camphene as described boiling at 122123.5 C. at 25 mm. pres- 4 sure when prepared according to the procedure" outlined in paragraph two of this example, melts at 221 C. and has a sulfur content of 13.74 and a copper content of 26.20%.
  • the starting material contains a different ratio of isomers or impurities which form the copper mercaptides the resulting copper compounds may differ in their melting range from that given in the specific example,
  • the copper mercaptides derived from camphene may be produced from the isolated mercaptans or they may be produced from the crude mercaptans, for in the copperization step any unreacted material or impurities which do not form the copper compounds are eliminated by the acetone extraction or by the use of similar solvents which do not dissolve the copper mercaptide.
  • the acetone wash may of course be omitted if the mercaptan which is employed is relatively pure or the acetone may be substituted by other solvents.
  • the ether employed as the solvent for the mercaptan in the preparation of the copper compounds may be omitted or it may be substituted by other organic solvents such as benzene, ligroin, kerosene, petroleum ether or lubricating oils.
  • the use of the solvent in this reaction is preferred for it facilitates working up of the final product.
  • This invention contemplates the preparation of new copper mercaptides of camphene irrespective of the process employed for the preparation of the mercaptan derived from the camphene, for it will be obvious that the mercaptan derived from the camphene may be produced by other processes than those mentioned above such as by the use of hydrogen sulfide or by replacing a halogen in the camphene molecule by the -SH group.
  • the copper compound of a mercaptan derived from camphene obtained by reacting a cuprous salt with a mercaptan derived from camphene by reacting camphene with sulfur to form a camphene-sulfur complex and hydrogenating the camphene-sulfur complex with hydrogen in the presence of a catalyst.
  • Copper compounds of mercaptans derived from camphene obtained by reacting camphene with sulfur to form a camphene-sulfur complex, hydrogenating the camphene-sulfur complex with hydrogen in the presence of a catalyst to form the mercaptans and then reacting the resulting mercaptans with cuprous chloride in aqueous ammonia solution in the presence of a reducing agent under conditions whereby the copper is maintained in the cuprous state.

Landscapes

  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Organic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Oil, Petroleum & Natural Gas (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Chemical Kinetics & Catalysis (AREA)
  • General Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Organic Low-Molecular-Weight Compounds And Preparation Thereof (AREA)
  • Lubricants (AREA)
  • Catalysts (AREA)

Description

Patented Jan. 7, 1947 COPPER COMPOUNDS OF MERCAPTAN S DERIVED FROIVI :CAMIHEN E Arthur L. Fox, Woodstown, N. J assignor to E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Company, Wilmington, DeL, a corporation of Delaware No Drawing. Application April 23, 1942, Serial No. 440,256
2 Claims.
This invention relates to new and valuable copper compounds and more particularly to the copper compounds of mercaptans derived from camphene.
It has recently been found that the addition of certain copper containing compounds to lubricating oils used in internal combustion engines imparts thereto desirable properties more particularly with regard to the stability of the oil. The copper containing ionogenic compounds which have been previously suggested for use in lubricating oils have certain disadvantages in that they do not effectively inhibit and often tend to cause hearing corrosion where the usual types of alloy bearings are employed in the engines. These copper containing compounds have also been found to have strong tinctorial properties and impart to the oils unnatural colors in the green, blue and purple range which are undesirable.
It is an object of this invention to produce new copper containing non-ionogenic organic compounds from the relatively inexpensive and readily available terpenes which show good solubility in organic compounds and lubricating oils and which impart to lubricating oils valuable nonsludging, non-lacquering and noncorrosive properties and which will not give to such oils unnatural and undesirable colors. It is a further object of the invention to provide new and valuable lubricating oil treating compounds comprising the copper compounds of mercaptans derived from camphene.
We have found that the copper compounds of mercaptans derived from camphene which may be prepared by reacting upon mercaptans derived from camphene with copper or copper salts show ood solubility in lubricating oils and because of their high copper content are useful in decreasing the sludge formation and lacquering properties of the oil and in decreasing bearing corrosion in those cases where the oils tend to corrode alloy bearings. These copper compounds of men captans derived from camphene, furthermore, do not have the strong tinctorial properties of the previously suggested compounds but instead color organic solvents and oils when dissolved therein in light yellow to red and brown shades, depending upon their purity, which are not objectionable. These new copper containing compounds are made by a simple and economical process directly from camphene, which is a relatively inexpensive and readily available intermediate.
The compounds of the present invention may be prepared by reacting camphene with sulfur at temperatures of from to 200 C., treating the resulting camphene-sulfur complex With hydrogen in the presence of a hydrogenation catalyst, that is active in the presenc of sulfur, to form the mercaptan, reacting the mercaptan derived from camphene with a copper salt, preferably under conditions which maintain the copper salt in a cuprous state, and isolating the copper compound of the mercaptan (copper mercaptidel or extracting it from the reaction mass with a solvent such as organic solvents or lubricating oil. The sulfurization and hydrogenation may be carried out simultaneously in the presence or in the absence of an organic solvent. The formation of the copper compound may be eiiected directly in the organic solvent solution of the mercaptan or after isolation of the mercaptan, all as more particularly described in copending application Ser. No. 440,253, filed of even date herewith. A mercaptan derived from camphene may also be formed from camphene b the addition of hydrogen sulfide in the presence of sulfuric acid, phosphoric acid or other catalyst as more particularly described in U. S. P. 2,076,875. The mercaptans may be reacted with the copper salt or with the metal itself in the presence of air, although the exclusion of air from such reaction is preferred. Because cupric salts tend to oxidizethe mercaptan to the disulfide the copperization of the mercaptan is preferably carried out with cuprous salts in the presence of a reducing agent or under conditions whereby the copper is maintained in the cuprous state. A preferred method for producing the copper salt is by adding an organic solvent solution of the mercaptan derived from camphene to an ammoniacal solution of a cuprous salt, such as cuprous chloride or cuprous acetate, in which there has been dissolved a reducing agent such as sodium hydrosulfite. This particular reducing agent not only maintains the copper in the cuprous state but it also tends to reduce any disulfide that might be formed in the reaction to the mercaptan whereby the yield of the copper mercaptide derived from the camphene is materially increased.
The new copper mercaptides derived fromcamphene may be dissolved directly in lubricating oil by stirring with or without heating or they may be dissolved in an organic solvent for use as a stock solution in treating lubricating oils. The copper salt of mercaptans derived from camphene are soluble in mineral oils, and hydrocarbon solvents such as benzene, hexane, paraflin oil,
etc., as well as in organic solvents such as ether, alcohol, dioxan, etc.
3 The following examples are given to illustrate the invention. The parts used are by weight.
Example 547 parts of camphene (having a distilling range of 157.3 C. to 160.1 C. with 80% distilling between 158.0 C. and l59.1 C., a refractive index of N20 1.4950 a freezing point of 37.9 C. and a specific gravity of 0.8366) and 249 parts of sulfur are heated in a steel autoclave, provided with agitation, at 150 C. for 10 hours under autogenous pressure. The condensation mixture is cooled to room temperature, and 40 parts of reduced nickel catalyst are added. The mixture then is hydrogenated at 150 C. and under a pressure of 600-700 lbs. per sq. in. until hydrogen absorption is complete as shown by absence of further pressure drops. After cooling, the crude product is filtered to remove the catalyst, and fractionally distilled at 25 mm. mercury pressure to obtain an essentially pure mercaptan with a boiling range of 115-118 C., a melting point of 445 C. and a sulfur content of 18.37%, and a higher boiling derivative having a boiling range of 122- 123.5 C., which is liquid at ordinary temperatures and contains 18.85% of sulfur.
In a reaction vessel in which the air has been displaced with nitrogen, 13.4 parts of cuprous chloride are dissolved in 203 parts of 8.7% aqueous ammonia solution. Any blue color from cupric salts present in the cuprous chloride is removed by slowly adding a small quantity of a reducing agent such as sodium hydrosulfite. 20.8 parts of crude mercaptan, as obtained above prior to distillation, dissolved in 36 parts of ether (or kerosene) are added to the solution and the mixture is agitated for two hours under a nitrogen atmosphere. A reflux condenser or external cooling is preferably employed as the heat of reaction is often sufiicient to vaporize a portion of the ether. The ether layer (upper) is decanted from the aqueous layer (lower) and filtered to remove traces of insoluble material. The ether fraction is then evaporated under vacuum at room temperature, giving a dark red resinous residue which on trituration with 80 parts of dry acetone yields a bright yellow ether soluble acetone insoluble powder which melts at 138 C. and has a sulfur content of 14.14% and a copper content of 26.22%.
The copper mercaptide of the distilled fraction of the mercaptan derived from camphene as described boiling at 115-118" C. at 25 mm. pressure when prepared according to the procedure outlined in paragraph two of this example, melts at 186.0 C. and has a sulfur content of 13.62% and a copper content f 26.20%.
The copper mercaptide of the distilled fraction of the mercaptan derived from camphene as described boiling at 122123.5 C. at 25 mm. pres- 4 sure when prepared according to the procedure" outlined in paragraph two of this example, melts at 221 C. and has a sulfur content of 13.74 and a copper content of 26.20%.
It is of course understood that when the starting material contains a different ratio of isomers or impurities which form the copper mercaptides the resulting copper compounds may differ in their melting range from that given in the specific example,
As illustrated in the above example the copper mercaptides derived from camphene may be produced from the isolated mercaptans or they may be produced from the crude mercaptans, for in the copperization step any unreacted material or impurities which do not form the copper compounds are eliminated by the acetone extraction or by the use of similar solvents which do not dissolve the copper mercaptide. The acetone wash may of course be omitted if the mercaptan which is employed is relatively pure or the acetone may be substituted by other solvents.
The ether employed as the solvent for the mercaptan in the preparation of the copper compounds may be omitted or it may be substituted by other organic solvents such as benzene, ligroin, kerosene, petroleum ether or lubricating oils. The use of the solvent in this reaction is preferred for it facilitates working up of the final product.
This invention contemplates the preparation of new copper mercaptides of camphene irrespective of the process employed for the preparation of the mercaptan derived from the camphene, for it will be obvious that the mercaptan derived from the camphene may be produced by other processes than those mentioned above such as by the use of hydrogen sulfide or by replacing a halogen in the camphene molecule by the -SH group.
I claim:
1. The copper compound of a mercaptan derived from camphene obtained by reacting a cuprous salt with a mercaptan derived from camphene by reacting camphene with sulfur to form a camphene-sulfur complex and hydrogenating the camphene-sulfur complex with hydrogen in the presence of a catalyst.
2. Copper compounds of mercaptans derived from camphene obtained by reacting camphene with sulfur to form a camphene-sulfur complex, hydrogenating the camphene-sulfur complex with hydrogen in the presence of a catalyst to form the mercaptans and then reacting the resulting mercaptans with cuprous chloride in aqueous ammonia solution in the presence of a reducing agent under conditions whereby the copper is maintained in the cuprous state.
ARTHUR L. FOX.
US440256A 1942-04-23 1942-04-23 Copper compounds of mercaptans derived from camphene Expired - Lifetime US2414035A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US440256A US2414035A (en) 1942-04-23 1942-04-23 Copper compounds of mercaptans derived from camphene

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US440256A US2414035A (en) 1942-04-23 1942-04-23 Copper compounds of mercaptans derived from camphene

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2414035A true US2414035A (en) 1947-01-07

Family

ID=23748057

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US440256A Expired - Lifetime US2414035A (en) 1942-04-23 1942-04-23 Copper compounds of mercaptans derived from camphene

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2414035A (en)

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2975200A (en) * 1958-05-22 1961-03-14 Phillips Petroleum Co Preparation of cuprous alkyl mercaptides
US2993923A (en) * 1959-08-20 1961-07-25 Phillips Petroleum Co Preparation of cuprous tertiarybutyl sulfonium chloride and its use as a selective herbicide
US3206466A (en) * 1962-06-27 1965-09-14 Dow Chemical Co Catalyzed method of preparing cuprous mercaptides
US3396156A (en) * 1964-06-24 1968-08-06 Schwarz Biores Inc The use of a complex of a cuprous halide and hydroxylamine for the preparation of copper mercaptides

Non-Patent Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
None *

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2975200A (en) * 1958-05-22 1961-03-14 Phillips Petroleum Co Preparation of cuprous alkyl mercaptides
US2993923A (en) * 1959-08-20 1961-07-25 Phillips Petroleum Co Preparation of cuprous tertiarybutyl sulfonium chloride and its use as a selective herbicide
US3206466A (en) * 1962-06-27 1965-09-14 Dow Chemical Co Catalyzed method of preparing cuprous mercaptides
US3396156A (en) * 1964-06-24 1968-08-06 Schwarz Biores Inc The use of a complex of a cuprous halide and hydroxylamine for the preparation of copper mercaptides

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
EP0275832B1 (en) Process for the preparation of mercaptomethylphenols
US3720616A (en) Hydroxybenzotriazoles as metal deactivators
US2414035A (en) Copper compounds of mercaptans derived from camphene
US1841768A (en) Chlorinated and brominated ethine carbinols
US2356661A (en) Lubricating oil
US2407265A (en) Copper compounds of mercaptans derived from terpenes and processes of producing them
US2587660A (en) Trifluoromethyl phenothiazine
US2289438A (en) Sulphurization of esters
US2412814A (en) Beta-alkyl-thio acrolein mercaptals
US2407266A (en) Copper compounds of mercaptans derived from pinene
US2443823A (en) Sulfurized terpenes
US2402686A (en) Hydrogenation of aryl sulphides and products resulting
US1790097A (en) New process for introducing sulphocyanic groups in organic compounds
US2535705A (en) 4-neopentyl-1,2-dithia-4-cyclopentene-3-thione and 4-methyl-5-tertiary-butyl-1,2-dithia-4-cyclopentene-3-thione
US2528785A (en) Mineral oil compositions containing alkyl aminobenzothiophenes
US2479513A (en) Lubricating oil
US2035106A (en) Purification and separation of sulphonates
US2295053A (en) Hydrocarbon oils containing organic trisulphides as oxidation inhibitors
Carothers et al. Acetylene Polymers and their Derivatives. XVII. Mercury Derivatives of Vinylacetylene
AT203485B (en) Process for the production of new dinitrophenyl methacrylates
US2361457A (en) Aminated chlorinated paraffins
US2434396A (en) Aminodiphenyl sulfides
US2356843A (en) Process for manufacture of improved lubricating oils
US2106976A (en) Neutralization of acid treated oil
EP0322360B1 (en) Method for the preparation of phenolic thiocarboxylic-acid esters