Nom du produit:5-amino-1-(tetrahydro-2H-pyran-4-yl)-1H-pyrazole-4-carboxamide
IUPAC Name:5-amino-1-(oxan-4-yl)-1H-pyrazole-4-carboxamide
- CAS:1082745-50-3
- Formule moléculaire:C9H14N4O2
- Pureté:95%+
- Numéro de catalogue:CM122027
- Poids moléculaire:210.24
Pour une utilisation en R&D uniquement..
Détails du produit
- N° CAS:1082745-50-3
- Formule moléculaire:C9H14N4O2
- Point de fusion:-
- Code SMILES:O=C(C1=C(N)N(C2CCOCC2)N=C1)N
- Densité:
- Numéro de catalogue:CM122027
- Poids moléculaire:210.24
- Point d'ébullition:453.4±45.0°C at 760 mmHg
- N° Mdl:MFCD12405839
- Stockage:Keep in dark place, store at 2-8°C.
Category Infos
- Pyrazoles
- Pyrazoles are organic compounds of the general formula C3H3N2H. It is a five-membered heterocycle consisting of three carbon atoms and two adjacent nitrogen atoms. As an H-bond-donating heterocycle, pyrazole has been used as a more lipophilic and metabolically more stable bioisomer of phenol. Pyrazoles have attracted more and more attention due to their broad spectrum of action and strong efficacy.
- Pyrazone
- Custom pyrazone for customers from all over the world are our main business.
- Tetrahydropyrans
- Tetrahydropyran is an organic compound consisting of a saturated six-membered ring containing five carbon atoms and one oxygen atom. Tetrahydropyrans are common structural motifs in natural products and synthetic therapeutic molecules. In nature, these six-membered oxygen heterocycles are usually assembled by intramolecular reactions, including oxygen Michael addition or ring opening of epoxy alcohols. In fact, polyether natural products have been particularly extensively studied for their fascinating structures and important biological properties; these are often formed through endoselective epoxy open cascades.
Column Infos
- Pyrans
- Pyrans are an important class of six-membered heterocyclic compounds, non-aromatic rings, composed of five carbon atoms and one oxygen atom, and contain two double bonds. The molecular formula of pyran is C5H6O, and there are two isomers. Pyrans, together with benzo derivatives, form scaffolds for a variety of drug applications, many of which are approved and promising candidates in clinical trials and recently isolated bioactive natural products.