- fumigant. Only
haloalkanes that
contain chlorine, bromine, and
iodine are a
threat to the
ozone layer, but
fluorinated volatile haloalkanes in
theory may...
-
haloalkanes; 2°
haloalkanes generally do not give
synthetically useful yields,
while 3°
haloalkanes fail completely. With
strong base, 3°
haloalkanes...
- In enzymology, a
haloalkane dehalogenase (EC 3.8.1.5) is an
enzyme that
catalyzes the
chemical reaction 1-
haloalkane + H2O ⇌ {\displaystyle \rightleftharpoons...
- Bromoethane, also
known as
ethyl bromide, is a
chemical compound of the
haloalkanes group. It is
abbreviated by
chemists as EtBr (which is also used as an...
-
tropylium and
triphenylmethyl cations and the
cyclopentadienyl anion.
Haloalkanes are a
class of
molecule that is
defined by a carbon–halogen bond. This...
-
consisting of
alkanes with
linked halogens (in particular, bromine-containing
haloalkanes)
Halomethane compounds:
Halon 10001 (iodomethane)
Halon 1001 (bromomethane)...
- is an
organic compound with the
chemical formula CH3Cl. One of the
haloalkanes, it is a colorless, sweet-smelling,
flammable gas.
Methyl chloride is...
- of iodine,
which may then be titrated.
Sometimes other halogens (or
haloalkanes)
besides iodine are used in the
intermediate reactions because they are...
-
indicating a
triple bond:
ethyne (acetylene),
propyne (methylacetylene). In
haloalkanes and
haloarenes (R−X),
Halogen functional groups are
prefixed with the...
-
measure of how
environmentally detrimental it can be. In a
broad sense,
haloalkanes that
contain no
hydrogen are
stable in the
troposphere and decompose...