diiodine
0 sources
diiodine
Summary
diiodine is a type of chemical entity[1]. diiodine ranks in the top 6% of type_of_chemical_entity entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- diiodine's image is recorded as Sample of iodine.jpg[3].
- diiodine's instance of is recorded as type of chemical entity[4].
- diiodine's chemical structure is recorded as Diiodine-2D-dimensions.png[5].
- diiodine's CAS Registry Number is recorded as 7553-56-2[6].
- diiodine's EC number is recorded as 231-442-4[7].
- diiodine's canonical SMILES is recorded as II[8].
- diiodine's InChI is recorded as InChI=1S/I2/c1-2[9].
- diiodine's InChIKey is recorded as PNDPGZBMCMUPRI-UHFFFAOYSA-N[10].
- diiodine's chemical formula is recorded as I₂[11].
- diiodine's subclass of is recorded as homonuclear diatomic molecule[12].
- diiodine's subclass of is recorded as simple substance[13].
- diiodine's part of is recorded as iodide peroxidase activity[14].
- diiodine's has part is recorded as iodine[15].
- diiodine's UNII is recorded as 9679TC07X4[16].
- diiodine's PubChem CID is recorded as 807[17].
- diiodine's ZVG number is recorded as 1010[18].
- diiodine's ChEBI ID is recorded as 17606[19].
- diiodine's found in taxon is recorded as Homo sapiens[20].
- diiodine's DrugBank ID is recorded as DB05382[21].
- diiodine's Human Metabolome Database ID is recorded as HMDB0000675[22].
- diiodine's mass is recorded as {'unit': 'Q483261', 'amount': '+253.8089'}[23].
- diiodine's melting point is recorded as {'unit': 'Q25267', 'amount': '+114'}[24].
- diiodine's boiling point is recorded as {'unit': 'Q25267', 'amount': '+184'}[25].
- diiodine's ECHA Substance Infocard ID is recorded as 100.028.585[26].
- diiodine's Google Knowledge Graph ID is recorded as /g/122wtfy4[27].
Body
Works and Contributions
Things named for diiodine include Jod-Basedow phenomenon[28], a class of disease[29].
Why It Matters
diiodine ranks in the top 6% of type_of_chemical_entity entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1 views/month).[2] diiodine has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[30] diiodine is known by 17 alternative names across languages and contexts.[31]
Entities named for diiodine include Jod-Basedow phenomenon[28], a class of disease[29].