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chlorohydrin
[klawr-uh-hahy-drin, klohr-]
noun
any of a class of organic chemical compounds containing a chlorine atom and a hydroxyl group, usually on adjacent carbon atoms.
chlorohydrin
/ ˌɔːəʊˈɪɪ /
noun
any of a class of organic compounds containing a hydroxyl group and a chlorine atom
a colourless unstable hygroscopic liquid that is used mainly as a solvent; 3-chloropropane-1,2-diol. Formula: CH 2 OHCHOHCH 2 Cl
Word History and Origins
Origin of chlorohydrin1
Word History and Origins
Origin of chlorohydrin1
Example Sentences
After trying 224 chemicals, Dr. Frank Earl Denny discovered that potatoes treated with ethylene chlorohydrin vapor flung up 2-ft. vines and began to bear before untreated potatoes showed above ground.
I remember, many, many years ago, answering the phone, Cliff Norbright—great chemist—telling me he had smelled phenol when he heated ethylene chlorohydrin in the presence of holmium-treated silica gel in a test tube.
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