sulfur dioxide

A summary of the most common chemical descriptors (InChI Key and SMILES codes) for sulfur dioxide are summarized together with 3D and 2D structures and relevant physico-chemical properties.

What is sulfur dioxide?

The molecule sulfur dioxide presents a molecular formula of O2S and its IUPAC name is sulfur dioxide.

3D structure

Cartesian coordinates

Geometry of sulfur dioxide in x, y and z coordinates (Å units) to copy/paste elsewhere. Generated with Open Babel software.

2D drawing

 

sulfur dioxide RAHZWNYVWXNFOC-UHFFFAOYSA-N chemical compound 2D structure molecule svg
sulfur dioxide

 

Molecule descriptors

 
IUPAC namesulfur dioxide
InChI codeInChI=1S/O2S/c1-3-2
InChI KeyRAHZWNYVWXNFOC-UHFFFAOYSA-N
SMILESO=S=O

Physico-Chemical properties

IUPAC namesulfur dioxide
Molecular formulaO2S
Molecular weight64.07
Melting point (ºC)
Boiling point (ºC)
Density (g/cm3)
Molar refractivity
LogP0.1
Topological polar surface area35.1

LogP and topological polar surface area (TPSA) values were estimated using Open Babel software.

The n-octanol/water partition coeficient (Kow) data is applied in toxicology and drug research. Kow values are used, to guess the environmental fate of persistent organic pollutants. High partition coefficients values, tend to accumulate in the fatty tissue of organisms. Molecules with a log(Kow) (or LogP) greater than 5 are considered to bioaccumulate.

TPSA values are the sum of the surface area over all polar atoms or molecules, mainly oxygen and nitrogen, also including hydrogen atoms.

In medicinal chemistry, TPSA is used to assess the ability of a drug to permeabilise cells.

For molecules to penetrate the blood-brain barrier (and act on receptors in the central nervous system), TPSA values below 90 Å2 are required. Thus, molecules with a polar surface area greater than 140 Å2 tend to be poorly permeable to cell membranes.