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Cyanoacetylene
Organic compound (HC≡C–C≡N)
Organic compound (HC≡C–C≡N)
Cyanoacetylene is an organic compound with the formula or . It is the simplest cyanopolyyne. Cyanoacetylene has been detected by spectroscopic methods in interstellar clouds, in the coma of comet Hale–Bopp and in the atmosphere of Saturn's moon Titan, where it sometimes forms expansive fog-like clouds.
Cyanoacetylene is one of the molecules that was produced in the Miller–Urey experiment.
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Nickel carbonyl catalyzes cyanoacetylene carboalkoxylation to cyanoacrylate esters.
References
References
- (1956). "Cyanoacetylene. I. The synthesis and some chemical properties". Nippon Kagaku Zasshi.
- Solomon, Philip M.. (1973). "Interstellar molecules". Physics Today.
- H. B. Niemann. (2005). "The abundances of constituents of Titan's atmosphere from the GCMS instrument on the Huygens probe". [[Nature (journal).
- de Lazaro, Enrico. (November 11, 2015). "Cassini Detects Giant Cloud of Frozen Compounds on Saturn's Moon Titan". Sci News.
- (2002). "Astrophysical and Astrochemical Insights into the Origin of Life". Reports on Progress in Physics.
- (2020). "Acrylic acid and derivatives".
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