DL-piperitone
0 sources
DL-piperitone
Summary
DL-piperitone is a group of stereoisomers[1]. DL-piperitone draws 14 Wikipedia views per month (group_of_stereoisomers category, ranking #206 of 1,063).[2]
Key Facts
- DL-piperitone's instance of is recorded as group of stereoisomers[3].
- DL-piperitone's chemical structure is recorded as Piperitone.svg[4].
- DL-piperitone's CAS Registry Number is recorded as 89-81-6[5].
- DL-piperitone's EC number is recorded as 201-942-7[6].
- DL-piperitone's canonical SMILES is recorded as CC1=CC(=O)C(CC1)C(C)C[7].
- DL-piperitone's InChI is recorded as InChI=1S/C10H16O/c1-7(2)9-5-4-8(3)6-10(9)11/h6-7,9H,4-5H2,1-3H3[8].
- DL-piperitone's InChIKey is recorded as YSTPAHQEHQSRJD-UHFFFAOYSA-N[9].
- DL-piperitone's chemical formula is recorded as C₁₀H₁₆O[10].
- DL-piperitone's subclass of is recorded as menthane monoterpenoids[11].
- DL-piperitone's Commons category is recorded as Piperitone[12].
- DL-piperitone's has part is recorded as carbon[13].
- DL-piperitone's ChEMBL ID is recorded as CHEMBL2252746[14].
- DL-piperitone's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/047m1wj[15].
- DL-piperitone's UNII is recorded as 1VZ8RG269R[16].
- DL-piperitone's ChemSpider ID is recorded as 6721[17].
- DL-piperitone's PubChem CID is recorded as 6987[18].
- DL-piperitone's ChEBI ID is recorded as 48933[19].
- DL-piperitone's found in taxon is recorded as Juniperus monticola[20].
- DL-piperitone's found in taxon is recorded as Zingiber mioga[21].
- DL-piperitone's found in taxon is recorded as Diplolophium africanum[22].
- DL-piperitone's found in taxon is recorded as Lippia rehmannii[23].
- DL-piperitone's found in taxon is recorded as Minthostachys glabrescens[24].
- DL-piperitone's found in taxon is recorded as Eucalyptus delegatensis[25].
- DL-piperitone's found in taxon is recorded as Thuja standishii[26].
- DL-piperitone's found in taxon is recorded as Artemisia sericea[27].
Why It Matters
DL-piperitone draws 14 Wikipedia views per month (group_of_stereoisomers category, ranking #206 of 1,063).[2] DL-piperitone has Wikipedia articles in 10 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] DL-piperitone is known by 12 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]