Anthramine is an organic compound with the chemical formula C 14 H 11 N [1] [2] .
| Anthramine | |
|---|---|
| Are common | |
| Systematic name | 1-aminoanthracene |
| Chem. formula | C 14 H 11 N |
| Physical properties | |
| Molar mass | 193.244 g / mol |
| Density | 1.208 g / cm³ |
| Thermal properties | |
| T. aux. | 224.4 ° C |
| Classification | |
| Reg. CAS number | |
| PubChem | |
| Reg. EINECS number | |
| Smiles | |
| Inchi | |
| Chebi | |
| ChemSpider | |
Notes
- ↑ Knox C., Law V., Jewison T., Liu P., Ly S., Frolkis A., Pon A., Banco K., Mak C., Neveu V., Djoumbou Y., Eisner R., Guo AC, Wishart DS DrugBank 3.0: a comprehensive resource for omics research on drugs (Eng.) // Nucleic Acids Res. : journal. - 2011. - Vol. 39 , no. Database issue . - P. D1035–41 . - DOI : 10.1093 / nar / gkq1126 . - PMID 21059682 .
- ↑ David S. Wishart, Craig Knox, An Chi Guo, Dean Cheng, Savita Shrivastava, Dan Tzur, Bijaya Gautam, and Murtaza Hassanali. DrugBank: a knowledgebase for drugs, drug actions and drug targets (Eng.) // Nucleic acids research : journal. - 2008. - Vol. 36 , no. Database issue . - P. D901-6 . - DOI : 10.1093 / nar / gkm958 . - PMID 18048412 .