I guess it's time to start putting this argument to a close, partly since the op has abandoned it.
Yeah, a reagent that only requires a small (sub-stoichiometric) amount in order to initiate the reaction. It differs from a catalyst in that it is consumed in the initiation process. Other similar species then carry out the bulk of the reaction turnover. A good example of this is a radical initiator such as AIBN.
there's actually a established paradigm for this? Note that wth radical reactions, you also have the chain reaction, and termination step. Don't know why, the "initiator" concept sounds a bit weird to me; it sounds more of a extremely inefficient genetic experiment
As I mentioned above, ethoxide is a slightly stronger base than methoxide, so they might react to some small extent, but in the presence of a stronger acid (thiourea) the resultant ethoxide would most likely react with that instead of methanol. Also, if methanol were used in sub-stoichiometric amounts, the concentration of ethanol would quickly overtake the concentration of methanol since in the course of the reaction two equivalents of ethanol are produced (one from each ester). Once the concentration of ethanol exceeded that of methanol it would be increasingly less likely for an ethoxide to encounter a methanol molecule before encountering a thiourea or another ethanol molecule first.
First off, "original" thiourea is more acidic then methanol? And isn't methanol a solvent in this reaction?
-it seems
much more efficient that methoxide be the base throughout the course of the reaction. Methoxide reacts with thiourea, releases ethoxide, which reacts with a surrounding methanol to furnish more methoxide, and so on. In your case, methoxide becomes somewhat of a spectator ion. You've got reactions going both ways. My assertion is that anytime methanol is the solvent, and the released ethoxide reacts with its surrounding methanol, the kinetics will drastically favor the methoxide route. Whereas in your route, the ethoxide is essentially getting "tugged" along, as it reacts with methanol along the way, releasing methoxide here and there
(don't you see where this is all pointing?). The kinetics just seem perfect with the methoxide route.
why wait at all for the ethoxide to be relasead, when you have methoxide right at hand?
-Ethoxide would actually have to be in 2 times in stoichiometric equivalence (at least) to thiourea, that is two moles of ethoxide are needed for every thiourea to achieve your proposed final product.
-seems there are plenty of disadvantages in considering ethoxide as a candidate base.
I guess we can agree to disagree. I have not disregarded your proposal at all, and I'll be more than happy to hear more about the topic from you, particularly if it includes a
specific reference (article, advanced text, website) to this particular reaction.