About: Chalcogen is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 1549 publications have been published within this topic receiving 22778 citations. The topic is also known as: oxygen family & group VI A element.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors introduce the periodic table and the concepts of the ionic bond, the covalent bond, and the metallic bond of hydrogen and the hydrides.
Abstract: Part 1 Theoretical concepts and hydrogen: atomic structure and the periodic table introduction to bonding the ionic bond the covalent bond the metallic bond general properties of the elements the occurrence and isolation of the elements coordination compounds hydrogen and the hydrides. Part 2 The s-block elements: group I - the alkali metals the chlor-alkali industry group II - the alkaline earth elements. Part 3 The p-block elements: the group III elements the group IV elements the group V elements group VI - the chalcogens group VII - the halogens group 0 - the noble gases. Part 4 The d-block elements: an introduction to the transition elements the scandium group the titanium group the vanadium group the chromium group the manganese group the iron group the cobalt group the nickel group the copper group the zinc group. Part 5 the f-block elements: the lanthanide series the actinides. Part 6 Other topics: the atomic nucleus spectra.
TL;DR: It is apparent that the chalcogen amino acids cysteine, methionine, selenocysteines, and selenomethionine exhibit a unique biological chemistry that is the source of exciting research opportunities.
Abstract: Sulfur and selenium occur in proteins as constituents of the amino acids cysteine, methionine, selenocysteine, and selenomethionine. Recent research underscores that these amino acids are truly exceptional. Their redox activity under physiological conditions allows an amazing variety of posttranslational protein modifications, metal free redox pathways, and unusual chalcogen redox states that increasingly attract the attention of biological chemists. Unlike any other amino acid, the "redox chameleon" cysteine can participate in several distinct redox pathways, including exchange and radical reactions, as well as atom-, electron-, and hydride-transfer reactions. It occurs in various oxidation states in the human body, each of which exhibits distinctive chemical properties (e.g. redox activity, metal binding) and biological activity. The position of selenium in the periodic table between the metals and the nonmetals makes selenoproteins ideal catalysts for many biological redox transformations. It is therefore apparent that the chalcogen amino acids cysteine, methionine, selenocysteine, and selenomethionine exhibit a unique biological chemistry that is the source of exciting research opportunities.
TL;DR: It is presented how chalcogen containing heteroaromatics, sulfides, disulfides, and selenium and tellurium analogues as well as some other molecular moieties can afford dependable ChB based supramolecular synthons and experimental evidence that similarities in the anisotropic distribution of the electrons in covalently bonded atoms translates in similarities in their recognition and self-assembly behavior.
Abstract: The distribution of the electron density around covalently bonded atoms is anisotropic, and this determines the presence, on atoms surface, of areas of higher and lower electron density where the electrostatic potential is frequently negative and positive, respectively. The ability of positive areas on atoms to form attractive interactions with electron rich sites became recently the subject of a flurry of papers. The halogen bond (HaB), the attractive interaction formed by halogens with nucleophiles, emerged as a quite common and dependable tool for controlling phenomena as diverse as the binding of small molecules to proteinaceous targets or the organization of molecular functional materials. The mindset developed in relation to the halogen bond prompted the interest in the tendency of elements of groups 13-16 of the periodic table to form analogous attractive interactions with nucleophiles. This Account addresses the chalcogen bond (ChB), the attractive interaction formed by group 16 elements with nucleophiles, by adopting a crystallographic point of view. Structures of organic derivatives are considered where chalcogen atoms form close contacts with nucleophiles in the geometry typical for chalcogen bonds. It is shown how sulfur, selenium, and tellurium can all form chalcogen bonds, the tendency to give rise to close contacts with nucleophiles increasing with the polarizability of the element. Also oxygen, when conveniently substituted, can form ChBs in crystalline solids. Chalcogen bonds can be strong enough to allow for the interaction to function as an effective and robust tool in crystal engineering. It is presented how chalcogen containing heteroaromatics, sulfides, disulfides, and selenium and tellurium analogues as well as some other molecular moieties can afford dependable chalcogen bond based supramolecular synthons. Particular attention is given to chalcogen containing azoles and their derivatives due to the relevance of these moieties in biosystems and molecular materials. It is shown how the interaction pattern around electrophilic chalcogen atoms frequently recalls the pattern around analogous halogen, pnictogen, and tetrel derivatives. For instance, directionalities of chalcogen bonds around sulfur and selenium in some thiazolium and selenazolium derivatives are similar to directionalities of halogen bonds around bromine and iodine in bromonium and iodonium compounds. This gives experimental evidence that similarities in the anisotropic distribution of the electron density in covalently bonded atoms translates in similarities in their recognition and self-assembly behavior. For instance, the analogies in interaction patterns of carbonitrile substituted elements of groups 17, 16, 15, and 14 will be presented. While the extensive experimental and theoretical data available in the literature prove that HaB and ChB form twin supramolecular synthons in the solid, more experimental information has to become available before such a statement can be safely extended to interactions wherein elements of groups 14 and 15 are the electrophiles. It will nevertheless be possible to develop some general heuristic principles for crystal engineering. Being based on the groups of the periodic table, these principles offer the advantage of being systematic.
TL;DR: This Perspective presents some demonstrative experimental observations in which chalcogen bonding is crucial for synthetic transformations, crystal engineering, catalysis and design of materials as synthons/tectons.
Abstract: Chalcogen bonding is a type of noncovalent interaction in which a covalently bonded chalcogen atom (O, S, Se or Te) acts as an electrophilic species towards a nucleophilic (negative) region(s) in another or in the same molecule. In general, this interaction is strengthened by the presence of an electron-withdrawing group on the electron-acceptor chalcogen atom and upon moving down in the periodic table of elements, from O to Te. Following a short discussion of the phenomenon of chalcogen bonding, this Perspective presents some demonstrative experimental observations in which this bonding is crucial for synthetic transformations, crystal engineering, catalysis and design of materials as synthons/tectons.
TL;DR: In this article, a number of copper sulfides and selenides were studied using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and it was found that the copper in all the compounds is monovalent, while the average oxidation state of the chalcogen varies from − 3 2 in Cu3Se2, to − 1 in CuS and CuSe and to built− 1 2 in CoS2 and CoSe2.
Abstract: A number of copper sulphides and selenides were studied using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. It was found that the copper in all the compounds is monovalent, while the average oxidation state of the chalcogen varies from —2 in Cu2S and Cu2Se, to − 3 2 in Cu3Se2, to −1 in CuS and CuSe and to built− 1 2 in CuS2 and CuSe2. The deficit of electrons relative to a closed-shell configuration is delocalized (holes in the S(3p) or Se(4p) valence band), leading to p-type metallic conduction. This is also found for the ternary compounds KCu4S3, CuV2S4 and TlCu2Se2. S2− and S− coexist in KCu4S3; the new compounds TlCu4S3 and KCu4Se3 are isostructural with KCu4S3.