When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: 1 bromomethyl 4 nitrobenzene 3 aluminum hydroxide for sale
    • Sign In

      Sigma® Life Science

      View contract pricing, get quotes

    • Product Directory

      Browse Through the Product catagory

      Find the right product

    • Order Center

      Build a Shopping Cart, View Orders

      Access ordering instructions

    • Materials Science

      Biomaterials, Nanomaterials, Metal

      & Ceramic Science, Polymers & more.

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Bromoform - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bromoform

    Bromoform was discovered in 1832 by Löwig who distilled a mixture of bromal and potassium hydroxide, as analogous to preparation of chloroform from chloral. [5]Bromoform can be prepared by the haloform reaction using acetone and sodium hypobromite, by the electrolysis of potassium bromide in ethanol, or by treating chloroform with aluminium bromide.

  3. Bromotoluene - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bromotoluene

    184.5 °c (364.1 °f; 457.7 k) Benzyl bromide is an isomer, which has a bromine substituted for one of the hydrogens of toluene 's methyl group, and it is sometimes named α-bromotoluene. Preparation

  4. Bromobenzene - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bromobenzene

    [3] Bromobenzene is used to introduce a phenyl group into other compounds. One method involves its conversion to the Grignard reagent, phenylmagnesium bromide. This reagent can be used, e.g. in the reaction with carbon dioxide to prepare benzoic acid. [4] Other methods involve palladium-catalyzed coupling reactions, such as the Suzuki reaction.

  5. Von Richter reaction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Von_Richter_reaction

    The reaction is a type of nucleophilic aromatic substitution. [4] Besides the bromo derivative, chlorine- and iodine-substituted nitroarenes, as well as more highly substituted derivatives, could also be used as substrates of this reaction. However, yields are generally poor to moderate, with reported percentage yields ranging from 1% to 50% ...

  6. Benzyl bromide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benzyl_bromide

    Benzyl bromide is used in organic synthesis for the introduction of the benzyl groups when the less expensive benzyl chloride is insufficiently reactive. [6] [7] Benzylations are often achieved in the presence of catalytic amounts of sodium iodide, which generates the more reactive benzyl iodide in situ. [3]

  7. Dibromobenzene - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dibromobenzene

    [108-36-1] [106-37-6] Properties Density and phase: 1.9940 g/ml, liquid 1.9523 g/ml, liquid 1.84 g/ml, solid Solubility in water: practically insoluble Other solubilities Soluble in 70 parts ethanol. Soluble in benzene, chloroform and very soluble in diethyl ether. Melting point: 7.1 °C −7.0 °C 87 °C Boiling point: 225 °C 218–220 °C ...

  8. Bromophenol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bromophenol

    Chemical structure of 2-bromophenol. A bromophenol is an organic compound consisting of hydroxyl groups and bromine atoms bonded to a benzene ring. They may be viewed as hydroxyl derivatives of bromobenzene, or as brominated derivatives of phenol.

  9. Organobromine chemistry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organobromine_chemistry

    Carbon–halogen bond strengths, or bond dissociation energies are of 115, 83.7, 72.1, and 57.6 kcal/mol for bonded to fluorine, chlorine, bromine, or iodine, respectively. [3] The reactivity of organobromine compounds resembles but is intermediate between the reactivity of organochlorine and organoiodine compounds. For many applications ...