Yes. Imine is derived from ammonia and containing an NHgroup attached by a double bond to a carbon atom in another group.
An imine is a functional group or chemical compound containing a carbon-nitrogen double bond. An imine can be synthesised by the nucleophilic addition of an amine to a ketone or aldehyde giving a hemiaminal -C(OH)(NHR)- followed by an elimination of water to yield the imine. However, the equilibrium in this reaction usually lies in favor of the free carbonyl compound and amine, so that azeotrope distillation or use of a dehydrating agent such as molecular sieves is required to push the reaction in favor of imine formation. For more details, see the links on the left side of this column.
A compound made up of hydrogen and nitrogen, for example ammonia (NH3).
Yes
NH covers 5,984,000 total acres.
NH stands for New Hampshire and a combination of nitrogen (N) and hydrogen (H).
NH is not a compound.
An imine is a functional group or chemical compound containing a carbon-nitrogen double bond. An imine can be synthesised by the nucleophilic addition of an amine to a ketone or aldehyde giving a hemiaminal -C(OH)(NHR)- followed by an elimination of water to yield the imine. However, the equilibrium in this reaction usually lies in favor of the free carbonyl compound and amine, so that azeotrope distillation or use of a dehydrating agent such as molecular sieves is required to push the reaction in favor of imine formation. For more details, see the links on the left side of this column.
No. NH is not a chemical compound. NH3, ammonia, is a base.
NH3 is ammonia
NH3 is ammonia
Nitrogen (N) Hydrogen (H)
No. A molecule of ozone is 3 oxygen atoms.
NH
Thionitrous acid is the answer, but I would write it as HSNO.
they're 2 different types, not just 1. Nitrogen, and Hydrogen.
Yes: ions NH+4 and NO-3
NH3 is a polar-covalently bonded compound.