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Epoxide

Encyclopedia : E : EP : EPO : Epoxide


An epoxide is a cyclic ether with only three ring atoms. This ring approximately is an equilateral triangle, i.e. its bond angles are about 60°, which makes it highly strained. The strained ring makes epoxides more reactive than other ethers, especially towards nucleophiles. Simple epoxides are named from the parent compound ethylene oxide or oxirane, such as in chloromethyloxirane. As a functional group epoxides obtain the epoxy prefix such as in the compound 1,2-epoxycycloheptane which can also be called cycloheptene epoxide.

A polymer made of epoxide units is called a polyepoxide or an epoxy. Epoxy resins are used as adhesives and structural materials. Example: epoxyethane

Synthesis

Epoxides are usually created by one of the following reactions:
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Reactions

Typical epoxide reactions are listed below.
EpoxOpen.png
De-epoxidation with tungsten hexachloride / n-butyllithium

See also

References

External links

  • For a full list of external links to MSDSs, spectroscopic data, commercial chemicals suppliers etc. for this compound, see [Chemical sources].

 


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