Steam'i Yükleyin
giriş | dil
简体中文 (Basitleştirilmiş Çince) 繁體中文 (Geleneksel Çince) 日本語 (Japonca) 한국어 (Korece) ไทย (Tayca) Български (Bulgarca) Čeština (Çekçe) Dansk (Danca) Deutsch (Almanca) English (İngilizce) Español - España (İspanyolca - İspanya) Español - Latinoamérica (İspanyolca - Latin Amerika) Ελληνικά (Yunanca) Français (Fransızca) Italiano (İtalyanca) Bahasa Indonesia (Endonezce) Magyar (Macarca) Nederlands (Hollandaca) Norsk (Norveççe) Polski (Lehçe) Português (Portekizce - Portekiz) Português - Brasil (Portekizce - Brezilya) Română (Rumence) усский (Rusça) Suomi (Fince) Svenska (İsveççe) Tiếng Việt (Vietnamca) Українська (Ukraynaca) Bir çeviri sorunu bildirin
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: