different between hydrocarbon vs coronene

hydrocarbon

English

Etymology

hydro- +? carbon

Noun

hydrocarbon (plural hydrocarbons)

  1. (organic chemistry) A compound consisting only of carbon and hydrogen atoms.
    Hyponyms: alkane, alkene, alkyne, cycloalkane, cycloalkene, arene

Derived terms

Translations

See also

  • aliphatic
  • aromatic
  • petroleum

hydrocarbon From the web:

  • what hydrocarbons are in gasoline
  • what hydrocarbon has a double bond
  • what hydrocarbons are saturated
  • what hydrocarbon is an unsaturated hydrocarbon
  • what hydrocarbon is natural gas
  • what hydrocarbons is crude oil composed of
  • what hydrocarbons are gases at room temperature
  • what hydrocarbons are in diesel


coronene

English

Noun

coronene (countable and uncountable, plural coronenes)

  1. (organic chemistry) A polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon consisting of six benzene rings fused together into a ring. Coronene has the molecular formula C24H12
  2. any derivative of this compound

Synonyms

(a hexagonal ring of 6 fused benzene rings):

  • superbenzene
  • circumbenzene
  • hexabenzobenzene
  • (6)circulene / 6-circulene / [6]circulene

Hypernyms

(a hexagonal ring of 6 fused benzene rings):

  • circulene (a ring composed of fused benzene rings)

Derived terms

  • hexabenzocoronene
  • dodecabenzocoronene
  • circumcoronene

Coordinate terms

(a hexagonal ring of 6 fused benzene rings):

  • graphene (a large flat sheet composed of fused benzene rings)
  • benzene (the benzoid molecule that would fill the hollow center of coronene)
  • kekulene (the benzoid molecule that would encompass coronene, as its hollow center)
  • circumcoronene (the benzoid molecule that would result if coronene were wrapped by another complete ring of fused benzene rings)

Translations

See also

  • carpathite (a mineral composed of coronene)

Further reading

  • David Barthelmy (1997–2021) , “Coronene”, in Webmineral Mineralogy Database
  • “coronene”, in Mindat.org?[1], Hudson Institute of Mineralogy, 2000–2021.

coronene From the web:

  • what is coronene in chemistry
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