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  2. Imide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imide

    A general linear imide functional group. In organic chemistry, an imide is a functional group consisting of two acyl groups bound to nitrogen. [1] The compounds are structurally related to acid anhydrides, although imides are more resistant to hydrolysis.

  3. Hydrocarbon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrocarbon

    Those with one triple bond have the formula C n H 2n−2. [1]: 631 Aromatic hydrocarbons, also known as arenes, which are hydrocarbons that have at least one aromatic ring. 10% of total nonmethane organic carbon emission are aromatic hydrocarbons from the exhaust of gasoline-powered vehicles. [4]

  4. Cyclic compound - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyclic_compound

    Rings may vary in size from three to many atoms, and include examples where all the atoms are carbon (i.e., are carbocycles), none of the atoms are carbon (inorganic cyclic compounds), or where both carbon and non-carbon atoms are present (heterocyclic compounds with rings containing both carbon and non-carbon). Depending on the ring size, the ...

  5. Ring (chemistry) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ring_(chemistry)

    A homocycle or homocyclic ring is a ring in which all atoms are of the same chemical element. [1] A heterocycle or heterocyclic ring is a ring containing atoms of at least two different elements, i.e. a non-homocyclic ring. [2] A carbocycle or carbocyclic ring is a homocyclic ring in which all of the atoms are carbon. [3]

  6. Aromatic compound - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aromatic_compound

    One electron forms a sigma bond with the hydrogen atom, and one is used in covalently bonding to each of the two neighboring carbons. This leaves six electrons, shared equally around the ring in delocalized pi molecular orbitals the size of the ring itself. [5] This represents the equivalent nature of the six carbon-carbon bonds all of bond order 1

  7. Carbon–nitrogen bond - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon–nitrogen_bond

    Similar to carboncarbon bonds, these bonds can form stable double bonds, as in imines; and triple bonds, such as nitriles. Bond lengths range from 147.9 pm for simple amines to 147.5 pm for C-N= compounds such as nitromethane to 135.2 pm for partial double bonds in pyridine to 115.8 pm for triple bonds as in nitriles. [2]

  8. Hydrogen bond - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrogen_bond

    Bifurcated H-bond systems are common in alpha-helical transmembrane proteins between the backbone amide C=O of residue i as the H-bond acceptor and two H-bond donors from residue i + 4: the backbone amide NH and a side-chain hydroxyl or thiol H +. The energy preference of the bifurcated H-bond hydroxyl or thiol system is -3.4 kcal/mol or -2. ...

  9. Structural formula - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Structural_formula

    In both cases, two specific carbon atoms and their connecting bond are the center of attention. The only difference is a slightly different perspective: the Newman projection looking straight down the bond of interest, the sawhorse projection looking at the same bond but from a somewhat oblique vantage point. In the Newman projection, a circle ...