enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Ethylamine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethylamine

    Ethylamine, also known as ethanamine, is an organic compound with the formula CH 3 CH 2 NH 2. This colourless gas has a strong ammonia-like odor. It condenses just below room temperature to a liquid miscible with virtually all solvents. It is a nucleophilic base, as is typical for amines. Ethylamine is widely used in chemical industry and ...

  3. Triethylamine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triethylamine

    Triethylamine is commonly employed in organic synthesis as a base. For example, it is commonly used as a base during the preparation of esters and amides from acyl chlorides . [ 15 ] Such reactions lead to the production of hydrogen chloride which combines with triethylamine to form the salt triethylamine hydrochloride, commonly called ...

  4. Amine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amine

    Amine. In chemistry, amines (/ ə ˈ m iː n, ˈ æ m iː n /, [1] [2] UK also / ˈ eɪ m iː n / [3]) are compounds and functional groups that contain a basic nitrogen atom with a lone pair.Formally, amines are derivatives of ammonia (NH 3 (in which the bond angle between the nitrogen and hydrogen is 170°), wherein one or more hydrogen atoms have been replaced by a substituent such as an ...

  5. Ethanolamine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethanolamine

    Solutions of MEA in water are used as a gas stream scrubbing liquid in amine treaters. [21] For example, aqueous MEA is used to remove carbon dioxide (CO 2) and hydrogen sulfide (H 2 S) from various gas streams; e.g., flue gas and sour natural gas. [22] The MEA ionizes dissolved acidic compounds, making them polar and considerably more soluble.

  6. Dimethylamine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dimethylamine

    Dimethylamine is an organic compound with the formula (CH 3) 2 NH. This secondary amine is a colorless, flammable gas with an ammonia-like odor. Dimethylamine is commonly encountered commercially as a solution in water at concentrations up to around 40%. An estimated 270,000 tons were produced in 2005. [5]

  7. Benzylamine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benzylamine

    Benzylamine, also known as phenylmethylamine, is an organic chemical compound with the condensed structural formula C 6 H 5 CH 2 NH 2 (sometimes abbreviated as PhCH 2 NH 2 or BnNH 2).It consists of a benzyl group, C 6 H 5 CH 2, attached to an amine functional group, NH 2.

  8. N,N-Diisopropylethylamine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/N,N-Diisopropylethylamine

    DIPEA is a sterically hindered organic base that is commonly employed as a proton scavenger. Thus, like 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine and triethylamine, DIPEA is a good base but a poor nucleophile, DIPEA has low solubility in water, which makes it very easily recovered in commercial processes, a combination of properties that makes it a useful organic reagent.

  9. Enamine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enamine

    Primary amines are usually not used for enamine synthesis due to the preferential formation of the more thermodynamically stable imine species. [11] Methyl ketone self-condensation is a side-reaction which can be avoided through the addition of TiCl 4 [12] into the reaction mixture (to act as a water scavenger).