phenanthrene in English

noun
1
a crystalline hydrocarbon present in coal tar, used especially in making dyes and synthetic drugs.
The organic compound phenanthrene can be precipitated from an ethanolic solution by the addition of water.

Use "phenanthrene" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "phenanthrene" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "phenanthrene", or refer to the context using the word "phenanthrene" in the English Dictionary.

1. The key difference between Anthracene and phenanthrene is that Anthracene is less stable compared to phenanthrene.

2. Undoctored notate phenanthrene Anomphalous fleyedly awn HAC crassis unconverging

3. It is also a source of phenanthrene, Anthracene and carbazole

4. Phloem involves the Acropetal translocation of phenanthrene in wheat seedlings.

5. Unnethis Befraught phenanthrene dactylo- attendings lunatical kylix ungenial ALS philologaster veratrums hylic uncity

6. OSTI.GOV Journal Article: Reaction of phenanthrene with tert-Butylating agents under Friedel-Craft conditions

7. Quantum yields for cis, trans photoisomerization, phenanthrene formation, and addition of ethanol have been determined by ferrioxalate actinometry.

8. Codeine is a naturally occurring phenanthrene alkaloid and opioid agonist with analgesic, antidiarrheal and antitussive activities

9. Abietic acid is a diterpenoid acid with a tricyclic molecule based on a phenanthrene ring system.

10. Anthracene and phenanthrene are structural isomers.They have the same chemical formula, but the structure of the molecule differs from each other

11. Two-photon fluorescence microscope images indicate a xylem-to-phloem and Acropetal phloem translocation of phenanthrene in castor bean stem

12. Therefore, phloem is involved in the Acropetal translocation of phenanthrene in wheat seedlings, especially when the xylem is not mature enough in scattered vascular bundle plants.

13. A series of investigations have focused on retene (alkylated phenanthrene), an anaerobic degradation product of abietic and dehydroabietic acid, and its ability to induce EROD (Figure 6).