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<3-(13C)>-cyclohexyl hydroperoxide is a chemical with a specific purpose. Lookchem provides you with multiple data and supplier information of this chemical.

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  • 133499-72-6 Structure
  • Basic information

    1. Product Name: <3-(13C)>-cyclohexyl hydroperoxide
    2. Synonyms:
    3. CAS NO:133499-72-6
    4. Molecular Formula:
    5. Molecular Weight: 117.149
    6. EINECS: N/A
    7. Product Categories: N/A
    8. Mol File: 133499-72-6.mol
  • Chemical Properties

    1. Melting Point: N/A
    2. Boiling Point: N/A
    3. Flash Point: N/A
    4. Appearance: N/A
    5. Density: N/A
    6. Refractive Index: N/A
    7. Storage Temp.: N/A
    8. Solubility: N/A
    9. CAS DataBase Reference: <3-(13C)>-cyclohexyl hydroperoxide(CAS DataBase Reference)
    10. NIST Chemistry Reference: <3-(13C)>-cyclohexyl hydroperoxide(133499-72-6)
    11. EPA Substance Registry System: <3-(13C)>-cyclohexyl hydroperoxide(133499-72-6)
  • Safety Data

    1. Hazard Codes: N/A
    2. Statements: N/A
    3. Safety Statements: N/A
    4. WGK Germany:
    5. RTECS:
    6. HazardClass: N/A
    7. PackingGroup: N/A
    8. Hazardous Substances Data: 133499-72-6(Hazardous Substances Data)

133499-72-6 Usage

Check Digit Verification of cas no

The CAS Registry Mumber 133499-72-6 includes 9 digits separated into 3 groups by hyphens. The first part of the number,starting from the left, has 6 digits, 1,3,3,4,9 and 9 respectively; the second part has 2 digits, 7 and 2 respectively.
Calculate Digit Verification of CAS Registry Number 133499-72:
(8*1)+(7*3)+(6*3)+(5*4)+(4*9)+(3*9)+(2*7)+(1*2)=146
146 % 10 = 6
So 133499-72-6 is a valid CAS Registry Number.

133499-72-6Upstream product

133499-72-6Downstream Products

133499-72-6Relevant articles and documents

The functionalization of saturated hydrocarbons. Part 20.+ Alkyl hydroperoxides: Reaction intermediates in the oxidation of saturated hydrocarbons by gif-type reactions and mechanistic studies on their formation

Barton, Derek H. R.,Bévière, Stéphane D.,Chavasiri, Warinthorn,Csuhai, Eva,Doller, Darío,Liu, Wei-Guo

, p. 2147 - 2156 (2007/10/02)

Chemical and 13C and 2H NMR spectroscopic evidence is presented, proving that secondary alkyl hydroperoxides are reaction intermediates in the oxidation of saturated hydrocarbons under GoAggII conditions (ferric chloride, hydrogen peroxide in pyridine - acetic acid solution). Isolation of cyclohexyl hydroperoxide from a GoAggIII oxidation of cyclohexane (GoAggII + picolinic acid as catalyst) and the effect of reducing agents (such as thiophenol, benzeneselenol, diphenyl disulfide, and diphenyl diselenide) on the GifIVoxidation of cyclohexane (ferrous chloride, zinc powder, oxygen gas, in pyridine - acetic acid solution) permit a generalization of the alkyl hydroperoxide intermediacy to the whole family of Gif systems. All those reducing agents lower the ketone/alcohol ratio, with either a decrease in the total amount of hydrocarbon activation or formation of phenylseleno derivatives. Triphenylphosphine (up to 3.5 mmol) shows the same effect on the ketone/alcohol ratio, but the total amount of activation remains approximately constant and no byproduct is formed. The mechanism of formation of the alkyl hydroperoxide intermediate has been studied using 18O2- The results indicate that the oxygen atoms in the alkyl hydroperoxide do not arise directly from hydrogen peroxide but from O2, formed in situ by the well-known iron(III)-catalyzed decomposition of hydrogen peroxide. The mechanism of formation of alcohols under these conditions has been addressed as well. The results from experiments in the presence of H218O, combined with those from the above-mentioned experiments under an 18O2 atmosphere, proved that the oxygen atom in the alcohol does not arise from a hydroxy species but from reduction of the intermediate alkyl hydroperoxide. The participation of another reaction intermediate (prior to the alkyl hydroperoxide) has been secured. If O2 is eliminated from the reaction mixture (running the reaction at reduced pressure) this first intermediate A can be trapped with Tempo. However, when the reaction was carried out at reduced pressure and in the absence of Tempo, no traces of alkylpyridine coupled products were detected. These alkylpyridines have been demonstrated to be formed when carbon radicals are generated under the same reaction conditions by photolysis of the corresponding N-hydroxypyridine-2-thione derivative of an alkyl carboxylic acid. This paradox can only be explained if intermediate A is not a carbon-centered radical. In a competitive experiment a ratio cyclopentyl-Tempo adduct/cyclohexyl-Tempo adduct of 0.66 was obtained. This figure differs from the values reported for typical carbon-radical competitive experiments, where cyclopentane is more reactive than cyclohexane. This further supports the nonradical nature of reaction intermediate A. Finally, studies with trimethyl phosphite, which affords with cyclohexane cyclohexyl dimethyl phosphate, show that cyclohexyl peroxyl radical is not an intermediate in the formation of the hydroperoxide as it would be if the cyclohexyl radical was reacting with oxygen.

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