¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Imides
1. imide [n] - See also: imide
Lexicographical Neighbors of Imides
Literary usage of Imides
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Text-book of Organic Chemistry by August Bernthsen (1891)
"Belated to the quiñones are the quinone chlor-imides, which result from the
oxidation of thep-amido-phenols orp-phenylene- diamines by means of chloride of ..."
2. The Identification of organic compounds by George Ballingall Neave, Isidore Morris Heilbron (1911)
"THE imides, like the acid amides, are hydrolysed by boiling with alkalies.
The only common imides are the following :— Succinimide, | />NH, MP 126°. ..."
3. Elements of Chemistry: Theoretical and Practical by William Allen Miller (1867)
"(1342) imides.—Intermediate between the amides and the nitriles there is a third
class of bodies, the imides, which contain nitrogen, and in which, ..."
4. Principles of Chemistry, Founded on Modern Theories by Alfred Naquet, William Cortis, Thomas Stevenson (1868)
"imides are obtained by decomposing diamides by heat. Second Process. — They are
also obtained by dehydrating acid amides ..."
5. The Chemical Constitution of the Proteins by Robert Henry Aders Plimmer (1913)
"Amides and imides of Amino Acids and Polypeptides. The occurrence of asparagine
and glutamine in plants and the formation of ammonia by the hydrolysis of ..."
6. Victor Von Richter's Organic Chemistry; Or, Chemistry of the Carbon by Victor von Richter, Richard Anschütz, Georg Schroeter (1899)
"In some of these reductions cyclic imides have been observed ; thus, in the
reduction of ethylene cyanide in the presence of tetramethylene diamine, ..."