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  2. Pyridinium perbromide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pyridinium_perbromide

    Pyridinium perbromide (also called pyridinium bromide perbromide, pyridine hydrobromide perbromide, or pyridinium tribromide) is an organic chemical composed of a pyridinium cation and a tribromide anion. It can also be considered as a complex containing pyridinium bromide—the salt of pyridine and hydrogen bromide—with an added bromine (Br ...

  3. Electrophilic aromatic substitution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrophilic_aromatic...

    Compared to benzene, the rate of electrophilic substitution on pyridine is much slower, due to the higher electronegativity of the nitrogen atom. Additionally, the nitrogen in pyridine easily gets a positive charge either by protonation (from nitration or sulfonation) or Lewis acids (such as AlCl 3) used to catalyze the reaction. This makes the ...

  4. Pyridine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pyridine

    Sulfonation of pyridine is even more difficult than nitration. However, pyridine-3-sulfonic acid can be obtained. However, pyridine-3-sulfonic acid can be obtained. Reaction with the SO 3 group also facilitates addition of sulfur to the nitrogen atom, especially in the presence of a mercury(II) sulfate catalyst.

  5. Simple aromatic ring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simple_aromatic_ring

    Typical simple aromatic compounds are benzene, indole, and pyridine. [1] [2] Simple aromatic rings can be heterocyclic if they contain non-carbon ring atoms, for example, oxygen, nitrogen, or sulfur. They can be monocyclic as in benzene, bicyclic as in naphthalene, or polycyclic as in anthracene.

  6. Pyridinium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pyridinium

    It is the conjugate acid of pyridine. Many related cations are known involving substituted pyridines, e.g. picolines, lutidines, collidines. They are prepared by treating pyridine with acids. [3] As pyridine is often used as an organic base in chemical reactions, pyridinium salts are produced in many acid-base reactions.

  7. Zincke reaction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zincke_reaction

    With secondary amines and not primary amines the Zincke reaction takes on a different shape forming so-called Zincke aldehydes in which the pyridine ring is ring-opened with the terminal iminium group hydrolyzed to an aldehyde: [4] Zincke aldehydes. This variation has been applied in the synthesis of novel indoles: [11] Zincke aldehydes Kearney ...

  8. Nitro compound - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nitro_compound

    The nitration product produced on the largest scale, by far, is nitrobenzene. Many explosives are produced by nitration including trinitrophenol (picric acid), trinitrotoluene (TNT), and trinitroresorcinol (styphnic acid). [3] Another but more specialized method for making aryl–NO 2 group starts from halogenated phenols, is the Zinke nitration.

  9. Aromatization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aromatization

    Aromatization is a chemical reaction in which an aromatic system is formed from a single nonaromatic precursor. Typically aromatization is achieved by dehydrogenation of existing cyclic compounds, illustrated by the conversion of cyclohexane into benzene.