Molecule:100615: Difference between revisions
From ChemWiki
molecule
(auto-generated) |
(auto-updated) |
||
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Molecule | {{Molecule | ||
|abbrev=DIPEA | |abbrev=DIPEA | ||
|trivialname= | |trivialname=N,N-Diisopropylethylamine | ||
|cid=81531 | |cid=81531 | ||
|iupacName= | |iupacName=N-ethyl-N-propan-2-yl-propan-2-amine | ||
|molecularMass=129.151749610 | |molecularMass=129.151749610 | ||
|molecularFormula=C<sub>8</sub>H<sub>19</sub>N | |molecularFormula=C<sub>8</sub>H<sub>19</sub>N | ||
|synonyms= | |synonyms=N,N-Diisopropylethylamine$Ethyldiisopropylamine$Diisopropylethylamine$N-Ethyldiisopropylamine$diea$DIPEA$N-ethyl-N-isopropylpropan-2-amine$Hunig's Base$2-Propanamine, N-ethyl-N-(1-methylethyl)-$1,1'-Dimethyltriethylamine | ||
|cas=7087-68-5 | |cas=7087-68-5 | ||
|hasVendors=true | |hasVendors=true |
Latest revision as of 17:18, 3 May 2024
Properties | |
---|---|
CID | 81531 |
CAS | 7087-68-5 |
IUPAC-Name | N-ethyl-N-propan-2-yl-propan-2-amine |
Abbreviation | DIPEA |
Trivialname | N,N-Diisopropylethylamine |
Exact mass | 129.151749610 |
Molecular formula | C8H19N |
LogP | n/a |
Has vendors | true |
Molecular role | n/a |
Synonyms | N,N-Diisopropylethylamine, Ethyldiisopropylamine, Diisopropylethylamine, N-Ethyldiisopropylamine, diea, DIPEA, N-ethyl-N-isopropylpropan-2-amine, Hunig's Base, 2-Propanamine, N-ethyl-N-(1-methylethyl)-, 1,1'-Dimethyltriethylamine |
Click here to copy MOL-file.
Click here to show SMILES and InChI.
Molecule is used on following pages
topic
- Photocatalytic CO2 conversion to CO
- Homogeneous photocatalytic CO2 conversion
- Photocatalytic CO2 conversion to CH4
publication
- Visible-Light-Driven Conversion of CO2 to CH4 with an Organic Sensitizer and an Iron Porphyrin Catalyst
- Toward Visible-Light Photochemical CO2‑to-CH4 Conversion in Aqueous Solutions Using Sensitized Molecular Catalysis
investigation
- Toward Visible-Light Photochemical CO2‑to-CH4 Conversion in Aqueous Solutions Using Sensitized Molecular Catalysis/Photocatalytic reduction of CO2: conditions optimization
- Visible-Light-Driven Conversion of CO2 to CH4 with an Organic Sensitizer and an Iron Porphyrin Catalyst/Photocatalytic reduction of CO
other