conhydrine
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conhydrine
Summary
conhydrine is a type of chemical entity[1]. conhydrine ranks in the top 6% of type_of_chemical_entity entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (4 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- conhydrine's instance of is recorded as type of chemical entity[3].
- conhydrine's chemical structure is recorded as (+)-alpha-Conhydrine.png[4].
- conhydrine's CAS Registry Number is recorded as 495-20-5[5].
- conhydrine's EC number is recorded as 207-798-1[6].
- conhydrine's canonical SMILES is recorded as CCC(C1CCCCN1)O[7].
- conhydrine's InChI is recorded as InChI=1S/C8H17NO/c1-2-8(10)7-5-3-4-6-9-7/h7-10H,2-6H2,1H3/t7-,8+/m0/s1[8].
- conhydrine's InChIKey is recorded as VCCAAURNBULZRR-JGVFFNPUSA-N[9].
- conhydrine's chemical formula is recorded as C₈H₁₇NO[10].
- conhydrine's subclass of is recorded as piperidine alkaloids[11].
- conhydrine's Commons category is recorded as Conhydrine[12].
- conhydrine's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0807qb8[13].
- conhydrine's UNII is recorded as Q21EOC14Q2[14].
- conhydrine's ChemSpider ID is recorded as 9919452[15].
- conhydrine's PubChem CID is recorded as 11744748[16].
- conhydrine's found in taxon is recorded as Aloe descoingsii[17].
- conhydrine's found in taxon is recorded as Aloe gariepensis[18].
- conhydrine's found in taxon is recorded as Aloe globuligemma[19].
- conhydrine's found in taxon is recorded as Aloe krapohliana[20].
- conhydrine's found in taxon is recorded as Aloe ortholopha[21].
- conhydrine's found in taxon is recorded as Conium[22].
- conhydrine's found in taxon is recorded as Conium maculatum[23].
- conhydrine's isomeric SMILES is recorded as CCC@HOC@HO">[24].
- conhydrine's mass is recorded as {'unit': 'Q483261', 'amount': '+143.131'}[25].
- conhydrine's ECHA Substance Infocard ID is recorded as 100.007.090[26].
- conhydrine's SureChEMBL ID is recorded as 3478050[27].
Why It Matters
conhydrine ranks in the top 6% of type_of_chemical_entity entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (4 views/month).[2] conhydrine has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] conhydrine is known by 6 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]