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Contributor: Puppy8800

Recently Edited Monographs (79 Total)

Cobalt(III) fluoride

Cobalt(III) fluoride is the chemical compound with the formula CoF3. This highly reactive, hygroscopic brown solid is used to synthesize organofluorine compounds. CoF3 is a powerful fluorinating agent, the product being CoF2. It decomposes upon contact with water to give oxygen.

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1 edit since May 19, 2008. Last edited Jul 23, 2008 by Puppy8800 (79).

Sulfuryl chloride

Sulfuryl chloride is SO2Cl2, a compound composed of sulfur, oxygen, and chlorine. At room temperature, it is a colorless liquid with a pungent odor. Sulfuryl chloride is not found in nature, as can be inferred from its speedy hydrolysis

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1 edit since May 19, 2008. Last edited Jul 14, 2008 by Puppy8800 (79).

Thiirane

Thiirane, more commonly known as ethylene sulfide, is the cyclic chemical compound with the formula C2H4S. It is the smallest sulfur-containing heterocycle. Like many organosulfur compounds, this species has a stench. Thiirane is also used to describe any derivative of the parent ethylene sulfide.

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2 edits since May 19, 2008. Last edited Jul 13, 2008 by Puppy8800 (79).

Calcium fluoride

Calcium fluoride (CaF2) is an insoluble ionic compound of calcium and fluorine. It occurs naturally as the mineral fluorite (also called fluorspar), and it is the source of most of the world's fluorine. This insoluble solid adopts a cubic structure wherein calcium is coordinated to eight fluoride anions and each F− ion is surrounded by four Ca2+ ions. Although the pure material is colourless, the mineral is often deeply coloured due to the presence of F-centers.

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3 edits since May 19, 2008. Last edited Jul 11, 2008 by Puppy8800 (79).

Lithium chloride

Lithium chloride is a chemical compound with the formula LiCl. The salt is a typical ionic compound, although the small size of the Li+ ion gives rise to properties not seen for other alkali metal chlorides, such as extraordinary solubility in polar solvents (83g/100 mL of water at 20 °C) and its hygroscopic properties.

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12 edits since May 19, 2008. Last edited Jul 11, 2008 by Puppy8800 (79).

Diethyl malonate

Diethyl malonate, also known as DEM, is the diethyl ester of malonic acid. It occurs naturally in grapes and strawberries as a colourless liquid with an apple-like odour, and is used in perfumes. It is also used to synthesize other compounds such as barbiturates, artificial flavourings, vitamin B1, and vitamin B6.

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2 edits since May 19, 2008. Last edited Jul 11, 2008 by Puppy8800 (79).

N,N'-Dicyclohexylcarbodiimide

Dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCC) is an organic compound with chemical formula C13H22N2 whose primary use is to couple amino acids during artificial peptide synthesis. Under standard conditions, DCC exists in the form of white crystals with a heavy, sweet odor. The low melting point of this material allows it to be melted for easy handling. DCC is highly soluble in dichloromethane, tetrahydrofuran, acetonitrile and dimethylformamide, but insoluble in water.

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3 edits since May 19, 2008. Last edited Jul 10, 2008 by Puppy8800 (79).

Bromoform

Bromoform (CHBr3) is a pale yellowish liquid with a sweet odor similar to chloroform, a halomethane or haloform. Its refractive index is 1.595 (20 °C, D). Small amounts are formed naturally by plants in the ocean. It is somewhat soluble in water and readily evaporates into the air. Most of the bromoform that enters the environment is formed as byproducts when chlorine is added to drinking water to kill bacteria.

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6 edits since May 19, 2008. Last edited Jul 10, 2008 by Puppy8800 (79).

Trichloroacetic acid

Trichloroacetic acid (also known as trichloroethanoic acid) is an analogue of acetic acid in which the three hydrogen atoms of the methyl group have all been replaced by chlorine atoms.

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5 edits since May 19, 2008. Last edited Jul 10, 2008 by Puppy8800 (79).

Octanitrocubane

Octanitrocubane (molecular formula: C8(NO2)8) is a powerful high explosive that, like TNT, is shock-insensitive (not readily detonated by shock). The octanitrocubane molecule has the same chemical structure as cubane (C8H8) except all eight hydrogen (H) atoms are each replaced by nitro (NO2) groups.

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7 edits since May 19, 2008. Last edited Jul 04, 2008 by Puppy8800 (79).

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