Common Name1h-pyrrole
DescriptionPyrrole is found in corn. Pyrrole is a flavouring ingredient Pyrrole has very low basicity compared to conventional amines and some other aromatic compounds like pyridine. This decreased basicity is attributed to the delocalization of the lone pair of electrons of the nitrogen atom in the aromatic ring. Pyrrole is a very weak base with a pKaH of about 4. Protonation results in loss of aromaticity, and is, therefore, unfavorable. Pyrrole is a heterocyclic aromatic organic compound, a five-membered ring with the formula C4H4NH. Substituted derivatives are also called pyrroles. For example, C4H4NCH3 is N-methylpyrrole. Porphobilinogen is a trisubstituted pyrrole, which is the biosynthetic precursor to many natural products. The starting materials in the Piloty-Robinson pyrrole synthesis are 2 equivalents of an aldehyde and hydrazine. The product is a pyrrole with specific substituents in the 3 and 4 positions. The aldehyde reacts with the diamine to an intermediate di-imine (R C=N N=C R), which, with added hydrochloric acid, gives ring-closure and loss of ammonia to the pyrrole
Structure
Molecular FormulaC4H5N
Average Mass67.08920
Monoisotopic Mass67.04220
IUPAC Name1H-pyrrole
Traditional NamePyrrole
CAS Registry Number109-97-7
SMILESc1cc[nH]c1
InChI IdentifierInChI=1S/C4H5N/c1-2-4-5-3-1/h1-5H
InChI KeyKAESVJOAVNADME-UHFFFAOYSA-N
CHEBI IDCHEBI:19203
HMDB IDHMDB0035924
StateLiquid
Water Solubility4.45e+02 g/l
logP0.76
logS0.82
pKa (Strongest Acidic)18.00
pKa (Strongest Basic)Not Available
Hydrogen Acceptor Count0
Hydrogen Donor Count1
Polar Surface Area15.79 Ų
Rotatable Bond Count0
Physiological Charge0
Formal Charge0
Refractivity20.82 m³·mol⁻¹
Polarizability7.17

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