¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Aryls
1. aryl [n] - See also: aryl
Lexicographical Neighbors of Aryls
Literary usage of Aryls
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Journal of the American Chemical Society by American Chemical Society (1901)
"... and aromatic alkyls be named aryls. Mixed fatty and aromatic radicals, such
as benzyl, are to be called ..."
2. Stereochemistry by Alfred Walter Stewart (1907)
"Bamberger and Rising - found that ortho-substituents had considerable influence
on the course of the reaction between aryl-hydroxylamines and nitroso-aryls ..."
3. Organic Compounds of Mercury by Frank Clifford Whitmore (1921)
"... studied "mixed" mercury alkyls and aryls in which the two bonds of the mercury
are attached to different hydrocarbon residues. ..."
4. Organic Compounds of Arsenic & Antimony by Gilbert Thomas Morgan (1918)
"Displacement of Arsenic from Aromatic Arsenicals.3 It was shown by La Coste and
Michaelis (p. 78) that mercury di-aryls and arsenious chloride give rise to ..."
5. A Dictionary of Chemical Terms by James Fitton Couch (1920)
"The reaction may be represented R— N : N— NH— R' -» R— N : N— R'— NH2, where R
and R' are aryls. ..."
6. The Dedham Historical Register by Dedham Historical Society (Mass.) (1890)
"... aryls descended from, or in any way related to, Joseph Caryl of London, the
Independent divine of the Commonwealth period. - HENRY A. CHANEY. 22 a. ..."