Anodyne

Desomorphine
Desomorphine
Molecular structure via molpic based on CDK
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Conformer structure via JSmol
Physical properties
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271.35 g/mol [1]
AppearanceRectangular plates from acetone-water [1]
Boiling pointSublimes in high vacuum between 140 and 170 °C [1]
DecompositionWhen heated to decomposition it emits toxic fumes of /oxides of nitrogen/. [1]
SolubilitySoluble in acetone, ethyl acetate [1]
2.8 [1]
Structural Identifiers
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C17H21NO2 [1]
(4R,4aR,7aS,12bS)-3-methyl-2,4,4a,5,6,7,7a,13-octahydro-1H-4,12-methanobenzofuro[3,2-e]isoquinolin-9-ol [1]
CN1CC[C@]23[C@@H]4[C@H]1CC5=C2C(=C(C=C5)O)O[C@H]3CCC4 [1]
InChI=1S/C17H21NO2/c1-18-8-7-17-11-3-2-4-14(17)20-16-13(19)6-5-10(15(16)17)9-12(11)18/h5-6,11-12,14,19H,2-4,7-9H2,1H3/t11-,12+,14-,17+/m0/s1 [1]
InChIKeyLNNWVNGFPYWNQE-GMIGKAJZSA-N [1]

Desomorphine

Desomorphine (also known as Dihydrodeoxymorphine, Permonid, Desomorfina, Krokodil, Deoxydihydromorphine D, Dihydrodesoxymorphine D, Desomorphinum, Desomorfin, Dihydrodesoxymorphine-D or 4,5-Epoxy-3-hydroxy-N-methylmorphinan) is a substance of the morphinan class.

Chemistry

Salts []

Desomorphine is typically found in the form of its hydrobromide and hydrochloride salts.

 []

Desomorphine is a absolute mixture

Pharmacology

See also []