Pyrrole
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Pyrrole | |
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Chemical name | Pyrrole |
Chemical formula | C4H5N |
Molecular mass | 67.09 g/mol |
Density | 0.967 g/ml |
Melting point | -23 °C |
Boiling point | 129 - 131 °C |
CAS number | 109-97-7 |
SMILES | C1=CC=CN1 |
Missing image Pyrrole_chemical_structure.png Chemical structure of pyrrole |
Pyrrole is a heterocyclic aromatic organic compound, a five-membered ring with the formula C4H5N.
Pyrroles are components of larger aromatic rings, including the porphyrins of heme, the chlorins and bacteriochlorins of chlorophyll, and the corrin ring of vitamin B12.
Pyrrole has very low basicity compared to amines and other aromatic compounds like pyridine where the ring nitrogen is not connected to a hydrogen atom. This is because the lone pair of electrons of the nitrogen atom becomes delocalized in the aromatic ring.
See also
- Indole, an analog with a fused benzene ring.
- Thiophene, an analog with a sulfur instead of the nitrogen atom.
- Furan, an analog with an oxygen instead of the nitrogen.
- Arsole, a non-aromatic arsenic analog.
- Simple aromatic rings
- Pyroluria
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