| ACh | |
|---|---|
| Esters [] | |
|---|---|
| Acetylcholine acetate | |
| Molecular structure via molpic based on CDK |
| Physical properties [] | |
|---|---|
| Molecular mass | 146.21 g/mol [1] |
| Melting point | 148 °C [1] |
| Predicted LogP | 0.2 [1] |
| Structural Identifiers [] | |
|---|---|
| Molecular formula | C7H16NO2+ [1] |
| IUPAC name | 2-acetyloxyethyl(trimethyl)azanium [1] |
| SMILES | CC(=O)OCC[N+](C)(C)C [1] |
| InChI | InChI=1S/C7H16NO2/c1-7(9)10-6-5-8(2,3)4/h5-6H2,1-4H3/q+1 [1] |
| InChIKey | OIPILFWXSMYKGL-UHFFFAOYSA-N [1] |
Acetylcholine
Acetylcholine (also known as Choline acetate, O-Acetylcholine, Acetyl choline ion, Acetylcholinum, Acetyl choline cation, 2-(Acetyloxy)-N,N,N-trimethylethanaminium, Ach, Azetylcholin, ethanaminium, 2-(acetyloxy)-N,N,N-trimethyl- or Acetylcholine cation) is a neurotransmitters substance of the carboxylic acid class.
Chemistry
Esters []
Acetylcholine is typically found in the form of its acetate ester.
Stereochemistry []
Acetylcholine is a achiral mixture
Anodyne