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Definition of Quinonoid
1. Adjective. (chemistry) of, relating to, or having the structure of a quinone ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Quinonoid
1. [adj]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Quinonoid
Literary usage of Quinonoid
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Colour in Relation to Chemical Constitution by Edwin Roy Watson (1918)
"CHAPTER II THE quinonoid THEORY Discussion of the quinonoid ... FEW theories have
led to so much experimental work as the quinonoid theory of the cause of ..."
2. A Text-book of Organic Chemistry by Arnold Frederik. Holleman (1920)
"... red salts are derivatives of a carboxylic acid containing a quinonoid-group,
... NO -OR quinonoid structure C6H4^ , the nitrophenols being regarded as ..."
3. Recent Advances in Organic Chemistry by Alfred Walter Stewart (1920)
"quinonoid Hypotheses. If we reject the two hypotheses which we have dealt with
in the preceding sections, it is clear that we have still a third possibility ..."
4. A Text-book of Organic Chemistry by Arnold Frederik Holleman (1920)
"... CO but that its red salts are derivatives of a carboxylic acid containing a
quinonoid-group, XC,H,OH COOMe* When the phenolphthalein is regenerated from ..."
5. A Text-book of Organic Chemistry by Arnold Frederik Holleman (1920)
"The isomerism of these compounds is explicable on the assumption for the colourless
derivatives of the normal structure quinonoid structure C , and for the ..."
6. The Chemical News and Journal of Industrial Science (1908)
"One of these is the remarkable difference in colour between the quinonoid diethyl
ethers and the alkali salts (orange in the first case and violet-red in ..."
7. The Relations between chemical constitution and some physical properties by Samuel Smiles (1910)
"THE quinonoid STRUCTURE The ortho or para quinonoid arrangement has been so ...
Of all those who have at one time or another advocated the quinonoid ..."
8. A Dictionary of Applied Chemistry by Thomas Edward Thorpe (1921)
"HO and if it were allowable to assume tautomerism to a quinonoid form in this
case, it might be allowable in other cases, eg in the case of fluorescein ..."