bornyl acetate
0 sources
bornyl acetate
Summary
bornyl acetate is a group of stereoisomers[1]. It draws 20 Wikipedia views per month (group_of_stereoisomers category, ranking #204 of 1,063).[2]
Key Facts
- bornyl acetate's instance of is recorded as group of stereoisomers[3].
- bornyl acetate's canonical SMILES is recorded as CC(=O)OC1CC2CCC1(C)C2(C)C[4].
- bornyl acetate's chemical formula is recorded as C₁₂H₂₀O₂[5].
- bornyl acetate is a type of camphan monoterpenoid[6].
- bornyl acetate's Commons category is recorded as Bornyl acetate[7].
- bornyl acetate comprises carbon[8].
- bornyl acetate comprises oxygen[9].
- bornyl acetate comprises hydrogen[10].
- bornyl acetate's found in taxon is recorded as Ferulago nodosa[11].
- bornyl acetate's found in taxon is recorded as Artemisia afra[12].
- bornyl acetate's found in taxon is recorded as Tanacetum polycephalum[13].
- bornyl acetate's found in taxon is recorded as Salvia iodantha[14].
- bornyl acetate's found in taxon is recorded as Valeriana celtica[15].
- bornyl acetate's found in taxon is recorded as Abies balsamea[16].
- bornyl acetate's found in taxon is recorded as Abies sachalinensis[17].
- bornyl acetate's found in taxon is recorded as Achillea abrotanoides[18].
- bornyl acetate's found in taxon is recorded as Achillea erba-rotta[19].
- bornyl acetate's found in taxon is recorded as Achillea grandifolia[20].
- bornyl acetate's found in taxon is recorded as Achillea moschata[21].
- bornyl acetate's found in taxon is recorded as Achillea nana[22].
- bornyl acetate's found in taxon is recorded as Achillea nobilis[23].
- bornyl acetate's found in taxon is recorded as Ageratum conyzoides[24].
- bornyl acetate's found in taxon is recorded as Aloysia triphylla[25].
- bornyl acetate's found in taxon is recorded as Alpinia breviligulata[26].
- bornyl acetate's found in taxon is recorded as Alpinia galanga[27].
Why It Matters
bornyl acetate draws 20 Wikipedia views per month (group_of_stereoisomers category, ranking #204 of 1,063).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 9 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28]