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  2. Carbon tetrabromide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_tetrabromide

    Preferred IUPAC name. Tetrabromomethane [2] Other names ... Carbon tetrabromide, ... International Chemical Safety Card 0474;

  3. List of compounds with carbon number 5 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_compounds_with...

    Several compounds – C 5 H 11 NO 2: amyl nitrite: 110-46-3 C 5 H 11 NO 2: amyl nitrite: 463-04-7 C 5 H 11 NO 2: butyl carbamate: 592-35-8 C 5 H 11 NO 2: iso butyl carbamate: 543-28-2 C 5 H 11 NO 2: valine: 72-18-4 C 5 H 11 NO 2 S: methionine: 59-51-8 C 5 H 11 NO 2 S: penicillamine: 52-67-5 C 5 H 11 NO 4: ammonium acid pyrotartrate: 61478-85-1 ...

  4. Carbide bromide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbide_bromide

    The great majority of these carbide bromide compounds contain rare earth elements. Since these elements have similar properties, similar structures can be made by substituting the elements. R 2 CBr 2 forms a structure with layers of R 6 C clusters that contain one carbon atom. Each layer has bromide coating the top and bottom.

  5. Carbon compounds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_compounds

    Carbon compounds are defined as chemical substances containing carbon. [1] [2] More compounds of carbon exist than any other chemical element except for hydrogen. Organic carbon compounds are far more numerous than inorganic carbon compounds. In general bonds of carbon with other elements are covalent bonds.

  6. Timeline of chemistry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_chemistry

    Joseph Black isolates carbon dioxide, which he called "fixed air". [35] A typical chemical laboratory of the 18th century 1757 Louis Claude Cadet de Gassicourt, while investigating arsenic compounds, creates Cadet's fuming liquid, later discovered to be cacodyl oxide, considered to be the first synthetic organometallic compound. [36] 1758

  7. Carbon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon

    Carbon was discovered in prehistory and was known in the forms of soot and charcoal to the earliest human civilizations. Diamonds were known probably as early as 2500 BCE in China, while carbon in the form of charcoal was made by the same chemistry as it is today, by heating wood in a pyramid covered with clay to exclude air. [108] [109]

  8. Carbonyl bromide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbonyl_bromide

    But the process is slow at room temperature. Increasing temperature, in order to increase the reaction rate, results in a further shift of the chemical equilibrium towards the educts (since Δ R H < 0 and Δ R S < 0). [3] [4] [clarification needed] Carbonyl bromide slowly decomposes to carbon monoxide and elemental bromine even at low ...

  9. Cyclic compound - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyclic_compound

    Cyclic compounds that have both carbon and non-carbon atoms present are heterocyclic carbon compounds, and the name refers to inorganic cyclic compounds as well (e.g., siloxanes, which contain only silicon and oxygen in the rings, and borazines, which contain only boron and nitrogen in the rings). [5]

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