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Grapefruit Mercaptan (Not all sulfur stinks)

28th July 2006

This is a bizzare molecule. As I was discussing yesterday, structure-odor relationships are tricky. One very reliable predictor, though, is that the compounds of the later chalcogens (that is, compounds containing a sulfur, selenium, or tellurium atom) stink. Sulfur being the second most common member of this group after oxygen, this usually means thiols.

Thiols have a prodigous appetite for metal, especially mercury. This led to a second name for them: mercaptans (describing their ability to capture mercury).

All this leads up to a truly unusual thiol: grapefruit mercaptan. You’ll notice it looks like another terpene, like carvone and damascone. Grapefruit mercaptan is such a singular compound because it is a nice-smelling thiol. It’s another one I haven’t smelled, but I’m told it’s very complex and grapefruity. It’s also unique because not many things synthesize thiols on purpose (thiols being reactive and stinky - skunks are a notable exception here).

The Wikipedia article notes that this is a bit of a thorn in the flavor industry’s side - almost ALL thiols stink, and this is a notable exception. Thiols have a nasty habit of oxidizing to form dimers in the presence of oxygen (R-SH -> R-S-S-R), and even if grapefruit mercaptan doesn’t stink, its decomposition products probably do. All these leads to a not-so-hot flavoring agent.

Here’s the structure:

See you Monday.

2 Responses to “Grapefruit Mercaptan (Not all sulfur stinks)”

  1. Adam Says:

    Ah, that explains the tellurium-breath phenomenon! “Tellurium-breath” sounds like an insult that a really dorky third grader would use. Also, this post from the Pipeline looks kinda cool.

  2. motd Says:

    As you go down the series they get worse. If you search for compounds of the chalcogens, they all smell terrible. One memorable compound (a selenide?) caused a town to be evacuated. One (apocryphal?) story said that tellurium-contaminated faculty had to leave work for months or years to not have such a terrible smell. Apparently one skunk odorant is an alkyl selenide (a thiol analogue).

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