Instalar Steam
iniciar sesión | idioma
简体中文 (chino simplificado) 繁體中文 (chino tradicional) 日本語 (japonés) 한국어 (coreano) ไทย (tailandés) Български (búlgaro) Čeština (checo) Dansk (danés) Deutsch (alemán) English (inglés) Español de Hispanoamérica Ελληνικά (griego) Français (francés) Italiano Bahasa Indonesia (indonesio) Magyar (húngaro) Nederlands (holandés) Norsk (noruego) Polski (polaco) Português (Portugués de Portugal) Português-Brasil (portugués de Brasil) Română (rumano) усский (ruso) Suomi (finés) Svenska (sueco) Türkçe (turco) Tiếng Việt (vietnamita) Українська (ucraniano) Comunicar un error de traducción
Inorganic chloramines
Inorganic chloramines comprise three compounds: monochloramine (NH2Cl), dichloramine (NHCl2), and nitrogen trichloride (NCl3). Monochloramine is of broad significance as a disinfectant for water.[3]
Organic chloramines
N-Chloropiperidine is a rare example of an organic chloramine.[4]
Chloramine-T is often referred to as a chloramine, but it is really a salt (CH3C6H4SO2NClNa) derived from a chloramine.[5]
Organic chloramines feature the NCl functional group attached to an organic substituent. Examples include N-chloromorpholine (ClN(CH2CH2)2O), N-chloropiperidine, and N-chloroquinuclidinium chloride.
Chloramines are commonly produced by the action of sodium hypochlorite on secondary amines: