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Dicarboxylic acid

open access: yes, 2023
Dicarboxylic acids are organic compounds that contain two functional carboxylic acid (–COOH) groups. Industrially, they are important in producing polyester, polyols, polyamides, and nylon and as a precursor to active pharmaceutical ingredients and additives. Dicarboxylic acids are important water-soluble components of atmospheric aerosols. Succinic,
Patel, Shuchi, Parmar, Mayur S
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Dicarboxylic Acid

open access: yes, 2014
Dicarboxylic acids are organic compounds that contain two functional carboxylic acid (–COOH) groups. Industrially, they are important in production of polyester, polyols, polyamides, and nylon and as a precursor to active pharmaceutical ingredients and additives.
Parmar, Mayur S, M.S. Parmar
openaire   +3 more sources
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Molecular recognition and sensing of dicarboxylates and dicarboxylic acids

Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry, 2020
This review outlines challenges faced in recognition and detection of dicarboxylic acids and dicarboxylates and strategies used to obtain effective and observable interactions in the period from 2014 to 2020.
Stephen M. Butler, Katrina A. Jolliffe
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Xenobiotic Conjugation with Dicarboxylic Acids

Current Drug Metabolism, 2018
Although it is believed widely that the various routes of xenobiotic metabolism are now all known and effectively understood, occasionally there emerges a metabolite that signals a novel biotransformation pathway, especially where the xenobiotic may in some way interact with the myriad processes of intermediary metabolism.
Stephen C, Mitchell, Glyn B, Steventon
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Anthracene-1,8-dicarboxylic Acid

Acta Crystallographica Section C Crystal Structure Communications, 1996
Anthracene-1,8-dicarboxylic acid, C16H10O4, crystallized in the noncentrosymmetric space group P2(1)2(1)2(1). The carboxyl H and O atoms are ordered. The carboxyl groups make angles of 13.9 (2) and 21.6 (2) degrees with the best-fit core plane and the average distance of the core atoms from this plane is 0.018 (12) A.
L J, Fitzgerald, R E, Gerkin
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Complexation and sensing of dicarboxylate anions and dicarboxylic acids

Coordination Chemistry Reviews, 2015
Abstract The relevance of dicarboxylate anions and dicarboxylic acids in biological and industrial processes requires that such species are easily detected and quantified. In this regard, the research about synthetic receptors, which can offer a straightforward analytical signal, has produced significant advances in the last decades.
David Curiel   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

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