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C6H6, benzene

C6H6 BENZENE 81.512 1.5282E-01 2.6522E-05 129.66 289 C7H5F3 A,A,A-TRIFLUORO- -602.334 3.0018E-01 1.5014E-05 -511.28... [Pg.379]

Aromatic hydrocarbons, sometimes referred to as arenes, can be considered to be derived from benzene, C6H6. Benzene is a transparent, volatile liquid (bp = 80°C) that was discovered by Michael Faraday in 1825. Its formula, C6H6, suggests a high degree of unsaturadon, yet its properties are quite different from those of alkenes or alkynes. [Pg.588]

The puzzling behavior of benzene, its unreactivity, and the inference that all six carbon atoms must be linked in the same way could not be described by an open carbon chain (or vertebrate), nor was it satisfactory to write one true "rational" formula for "empirical" C6H6 benzene. Albert Ladenburg s nonplanar prism formula was the best single representation,... [Pg.113]

C6H4(CH3)2(xylene) C6H5CH3 (toluene) C6H6 (benzene). [Pg.345]


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Benzene and the C6H6 isomers

C6H6

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