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  2. 1-Butene - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1-Butene

    1-Butene (IUPAC name: But-1-ene, also known as 1-butylene) is the organic compound with the formula CH 3 CH 2 CH=CH 2. It is a colorless gas. But-1-ene is an alkene easily condensed to give a colorless liquid. It is classified as a linear alpha-olefin (terminal alkene). [2] It is one of the isomers of butene (butylene). It is a precursor to ...

  3. Butene - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Butene

    Butene, also known as butylene, is an alkene with the formula C 4 H 8. The word butene may refer to any of the individual compounds. They are colourless gases that ...

  4. Tribromine octoxide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tribromine_octoxide

    Tribromine octoxide is a binary inorganic compound of bromine and oxygen with the chemical formula Br 3 O 8. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] This is a free radical and one of the most complex bromine oxides . Synthesis

  5. Organobromine chemistry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organobromine_chemistry

    Bromine is more electronegative than carbon (2.9 vs 2.5). Consequently, the carbon in a carbon–bromine bond is electrophilic, i.e. alkyl bromides are alkylating agents. [2] 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 ...

  6. Alkene - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alkene

    The bromine test can also be used as an indication of the degree of unsaturation for unsaturated hydrocarbons. Bromine number is defined as gram of bromine able to react with 100g of product. [18] Similar as hydrogenation, the halogenation of bromine is also depend on the number of π bond. A higher bromine number indicates higher degree of ...

  7. Free-radical halogenation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free-radical_halogenation

    The relative rates at which different halogens react vary considerably: [citation needed] fluorine (108) > chlorine (1) > bromine (7 × 10 −11) > iodine (2 × 10 −22).. Radical fluorination with the pure element is difficult to control and highly exothermic; care must be taken to prevent an explosion or a runaway reaction.

  8. Free-radical addition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free-radical_addition

    These bromine atoms add to an alkene at the most accessible site, to give a bromoalkyl radical, with the radical on the more substituted carbon. That radical then abstracts a hydrogen atom from another HBr molecule to regenerate the monatomic bromine and continue the reaction. [3]: 758

  9. Prilezhaev reaction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prilezhaev_reaction

    An illustrative example is the epoxidation of trans-2-butene with m-CPBA to give trans-2,3-epoxybutane: [4] The oxygen atom that adds across the double bond of the alkene is taken from the peroxy acid, generating a molecule of the corresponding carboxylic acid as a byproduct.