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2-Aminothiophenol is an organosulfur compound with the formula C 6 H 4 (SH)(NH 2). It is a colorless oily solid, although impure samples can be deeply colored. It is soluble in organic solvents and in basic water. 2-Aminothiophenol is a precursor to benzothiazoles, some of which are bioactive or are commercial dyes.
Aminothiophenol may refer to: 2-Aminothiophenol; 3-Aminothiophenol [Wikidata] 4-Aminothiophenol This page was last edited on 14 May 2022, at ...
2-Aminobiphenyl; 2-Aminophenol; 2-Aminothiophenol; O-Anisidine; I. ID-4708 This page was last edited on 1 November 2024, at 20:07 (UTC). Text is available under the ...
2-Aminophenol has a variety of uses. As a reducing agent, it is marketed under the names of Atomal and Ortol to develop black-and-white photographs. [3] 2-Aminophenol is an intermediate in the synthesis of dyes. It is particularly useful in yielding metal-complex dyes when diazotized and coupled to a phenol, naphthol, or other aromatic or ...
The molecule is planar with a C=S double bond, so the name mercaptobenzothiazole is a misnomer, a more appropriate name could be benzothiazoline-2-thione. Solution measurements by NMR spectroscopy could not measure the presence of the thiol tautomer that the name implies, instead it exists as a thione / dithiocarbamate and the hydrogen appears ...
1,2,3-benzothiadiazole is much less nucleophilic than naphthalene. Nitration is slow. [8] For that reason, many of its simple derivatives have been made from 2-aminothiophenols already having additional substituents. [7] 1,2,3-benzothiadiazole is a very weak base and alkylation reactions give exclusively the 3-amino quaternary salt. [9]
Lorazepam can be made using 2-amino-2′,5-dichlorobenzophenone (a derivative of 2-amino-5-chlorobenzophenone), which is first reacted with hydroxylamine, the obtained product is then reacted with chloroacetyl chloride to give 6-chloro-2-chlormethyl-4-(2′-chlorophenyl)quinazolin-3-oxide, a reaction with methylamine produces ring expansion and rearrangement, which forms 7-chloro-2-methylamino ...
Toxic units (TU) are used in the field of toxicology to quantify the interactions of toxicants in binary mixtures of chemicals. [1] A toxic unit for a given compound is based on the concentration at which there is a 50% effect (ex. EC50) for a certain biological endpoint. One toxic unit is equal to the EC50 for a given endpoint for a specific ...