Review on thiazoles

Authors

  • Dr Poonam Asstt. Professor (Chemistry)DR. BRA Govt. College, Kaithal

Keywords:

Thiazoles, condensed, anti-fungal

Abstract

Thiazole, or 1,3-thiazole, is a heterocyclic compound that contains both sulfur and nitrogen; the term 'thiazole' also refers to a large family of derivatives. Thiazole itself is a pale yellow liquid with a pyridine-like odor and the molecular formula C3H3NS.[2] The thiazole ring is notable as a component of the vitamin thiamine (B1).

References

Alajarín, M.; Cabrera, J.; Pastor, A.; Sánchez-Andrada, P.; Bautista, D. (2006). "On the [2+2] Cycloaddition of 2-Aminothiazoles and Dimethyl Acetylenedicarboxylate. Experimental and Computational Evidence of a Thermal Disrotatory Ring Opening of Fused Cyclobutenes". J. Org. Chem. 71 (14): 5328–5339.

Dondoni, A.; Merino, P. (1995). "Diastereoselective Homologation of D-(R)-Glyceraldehyde Acetonide using 2-(Trimethylsilyl)thiazole". Organic Syntheses. 72: 21.; Collective Volume, 9, p. 952.

Arduengo, A. J.; Goerlich, J. R.; Marshall, W. J. (1997). "A Stable Thiazol-2-ylidene and Its Dimer". Liebigs Annalen. 1997 (2): 365–374.

Zoltewicz, J. A.; Deady, L. W. (1978). Quaternization of Heteroaromatic Compounds. Quantitative Aspects. Advances in Heterocyclic Chemistry. 22. pp. 71–121.

Eicher, T.; Hauptmann, S. (2003). The Chemistry of Heterocycles: Structure, Reactions, Syntheses, and Applications. ISBN 978-3-527-30720-3.

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Published

2017-12-30

How to Cite

Dr Poonam. (2017). Review on thiazoles. Innovative Research Thoughts, 3(8), 38–40. Retrieved from https://irt.shodhsagar.com/index.php/j/article/view/193