Benzhydryl compounds

{{Short description|Organic compounds which include diphenylmethane}}

File:Diphenylmethane2.png

The benzhydryl compounds are a group of organic compounds whose parent structures include diphenylmethane (which is two benzene rings connected by a single methane), with any number of attached substituents, including bridges. This group typically excludes compounds in which either benzene is fused to another ring (bicyclic, tricyclic, polycyclic){{MeSH name|Benzhydryl Compounds}} or includes a heteroatom, or where the methane connects to three or four benzenes.

File:Benzhydryl radical ball.png

The benzhydryl radical can be abbreviated {{Chem|Ph|2|CH•}} or Bzh.{{cite journal|title=Abbreviations and Symbols|journal=European Journal of Biochemistry|volume=74|issue=1|year=1977|pages=1–6|issn=0014-2956|doi=10.1111/j.1432-1033.1977.tb11359.x|url=https://febs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1432-1033.1977.tb11359.x|doi-access=free}}

Carboaromatic

=Alcohols=

=Alkenes=

=Alkyl(amine)s=

=Alkoxy compounds=

=Amines=

=Other=

Heteroaromatic

These species are not strictly benzhydryl-containing but are analogous.

=Heteroaromatic rings=

=Benzenes linked by a non-carbon atom=

=Benzene and heterocycle linked through a non-carbon=

References

{{Reflist}}