sulfursubstituted
Sulfursubstituted refers to chemical species in which one or more atoms in a parent structure have been replaced by sulfur-containing substituents. The term is used broadly across organic and inorganic chemistry to describe derivatives in which sulfur plays the substituent role rather than being part of the principal functional group. Common examples include sulfanyl substituents (often denoted as -SH groups or the -S- linkage in thio derivatives), thioethers (sulfides, R–S–R′), thioesters (R–C(=O)–S–R′), and various sulfur-containing heterocycles such as thiophenes.
In practice, sulfursubstituted compounds arise in several contexts. A thiol or sulfanyl group introduces sulfur in
Nomenclature for sulfursubstituted compounds often uses terms such as sulfanyl- or thiol-/mercapto- for -SH substituents, and
Applications span organic synthesis, medicinal chemistry, materials science, and aroma chemistry, where sulfur substitution can tune