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2007-03-13 06:58:36 · 3 answers · asked by Carolina Z 1 in Science & Mathematics Chemistry

it is an chemical compound in which the structure is to be derived for an inorganic chemistry class, ive calculated the degrees of unsaturation which is two so im a assuming that it might be a ring structure with a carbon substituent that has a double bond. As of yet ive had no luck finding this compound anywhere either.

2007-03-15 05:09:05 · update #1

3 answers

Are you sure the formula is correct? See the 1st link for suggestions on C12H21B.

I would gues the formula should be C22H21B which is a commercially available chemical (see 2nd link).

More info would help. What is the source? Reactants?

2007-03-13 07:58:32 · answer #1 · answered by cdog_97 4 · 0 0

That is a carborane, but I can't find any examples of carboranes like that in my inorganic chemistry textbook.
The structure of carboranes depends on the number of atoms, and since I don't think that is a correct formula, I can't tell you what the carborane looks like.

2007-03-13 15:53:13 · answer #2 · answered by davisoldham 5 · 0 0

nido

2007-03-13 14:22:59 · answer #3 · answered by ag_iitkgp 7 · 0 0

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