Alitame is an artificial sweetener developed by Pfizer in the early 1980s and currently marketed in some countries under the brand name Aclame. Like aspartame alitame is an aspartic acid-containing […]
List of articles in "Chemical Substance" category - Page 939
Dulcin
Dulcin is an artificial sweetener about 250 times sweeter than sugar discovered in 1884 by Joseph Berlinerbau. It was first mass-produced about seven years later. Despite the fact that it […]
Linalool
Linalool /lɪˈnælɵ.ɒl/ is a naturally occurring terpene alcohol chemical found in many flowers and spice plants with many commercial applications the majority of which based on its pleasant scent (floral […]
Lithium diisopropylamide
Lithium diisopropylamide (commonly abbreviated LDA) is a chemical compound with the molecular structure [(CH3)2CH]2NLi. It is used as a strong base and has been widely accepted due to its good […]
Sodium thiosulfate
Sodium thiosulfate (Na2S2O3) also spelled sodium thiosulphate is a colorless crystalline compound that is more familiar as the pentahydrate Na2S2O3·5H2O an efflorescent monoclinic crystalline substance also called sodium hyposulfite or […]
Pyrene
Pyrene is a polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) consisting of four fused benzene rings resulting in a flat aromatic system. The chemical formula is C16H10. This colorless solid is the smallest […]
Mucic acid
Mucic acid C6H10O8 or HOOC-(CHOH)4-COOH (also known as galactaric or meso-galactaric acid) is an aldaric acid obtained by nitric acid oxidation of galactose or galactose-containing compounds like lactose dulcite quercite […]
Silicic acid
Silicic acid /sɪˈlɪsɪk ˌæsɪd/ is a chemical compound. It is a silanol. Silicic acid is the general name for a family of chemical compounds containing the element silicon attached to […]
Caesium fluoride
Caesium fluoride or cesium fluoride is an inorganic compound usually encountered as a hygroscopic white solid. It is used in organic synthesis as a source of the fluoride anion. Caesium […]
Diethyl ether peroxide
Diethyl ether peroxides are a class of organic peroxides that slowly form in diethyl ether upon storage under air light or in the presence of metal by autoxidation.