- Source: Nitroamine
In organic and inorganic chemistry, nitroamines or nitramides are chemical compounds with the general chemical structure R1R2N−NO2. They consist of a nitro group (−NO2) bonded to the nitrogen of an amine. The R groups can be any group, typically hydrogen (e.g., methylnitroamine CH3−NH−NO2) and organyl (e.g., diethylnitroamine (CH3CH2−)2N−NO2). An example of inorganic nitroamine is chloronitroamine or chloro(nitro)amine Cl−NH−NO2. The parent inorganic compound, where both R substituents are hydrogen, is nitramide or nitroamine, H2N−NO2.
N-Nitroaniline rearranges in the presence of acid to give 2-nitroaniline.
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Nitroamine
- Hexanitrohexaazaisowurtzitane
- HMX
- RDX
- Nitramide
- Nitroguanidine
- HHTDD
- C-4 (explosive)
- Tetryl
- Benzylamine