Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
2,3-Dimethylbutane is an isomer of hexane. It has the chemical formula (CH 3) 2 CHCH(CH 3) 2. It is a colorless liquid which boils at 57.9 °C. References
2: Ethyl fluoride or Refrigerant gas R 161 UN 2454: 2: Methyl fluoride, or Refrigerant gas R 41 UN 2455: 2: Methyl nitrite: UN 2456: 3: 2-Chloropropene: UN 2457: 3: 2,3-Dimethylbutane: UN 2458: 3: Hexadienes: UN 2459: 3: 2-Methyl-1-butene: UN 2460: 3: 2-Methyl-2-butene: UN 2461: 3: Methylpentadienes: UN 2462? (UN No. no longer in use) Methyl ...
2,3-Dimethyl-1-butene is an organic compound with the formula CH 2 =C(CH 3)CH(CH 3) 2. Like the other isomers of dimethylbutene, it is a colorless liquid. Together with 2,3-dimethyl-2-butene it can be produced by dimerization of propylene. It is a precursor to the commercial fragrance tonalide. [1]
The longest possible main alkane chain is used; therefore 3-ethyl-4-methylhexane instead of 2,3-diethylpentane, even though these describe equivalent structures. The di-, tri- etc. prefixes are ignored for the purpose of alphabetical ordering of side chains (e.g. 3-ethyl-2,4-dimethylpentane, not 2,4-dimethyl-3-ethylpentane).
Dimethylbutadiene, formally referred to as 2,3-dimethyl-1,3-butadiene, is an organic compound with the formula (CH 3) 2 C 4 H 4. It is colorless liquid which served an important role in the early history of synthetic rubber. It is now a specialty reagent.
2,3-Dimethyl-2-butene This page was last edited on 20 October 2020, at 08:55 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4. ...
Most famously, at least in the classroom, pinacolone arises by the pinacol rearrangement, which occurs by protonation of pinacol (2,3-dimethylbutane-2,3-diol). [4] Industrially pinacolone is made by the hydrolysis of 4,4,5-trimethyl-1,3-dioxane, which is the product of isoprene and formaldehyde via the Prins reaction.
2,2-Dimethylbutane, trivially known as neohexane at William Odling's 1876 suggestion, [4] is an organic compound with formula C 6 H 14 or (H 3 C-) 3-C-CH 2-CH 3. It is therefore an alkane , indeed the most compact and branched of the hexane isomers — the only one with a quaternary carbon and a butane (C 4 ) backbone.