Amide

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search

Amide can refer to two different things.

[change] Amides in inorganic chemistry

An amide ion is different from an amide in organic chemistry. The amide ion is made by deprotonating ammonia. This is ammonia acting as an acid, although a very weak one. Amides made by deprotonating ammonia are very strong bases. Sodium amide is an example.

[change] Amides in organic chemistry


Amides are also chemical compounds. They are made by reacting carboxylic acids like acetic acid with amines. There are many ways to make them. They are also used in many chemical reactions.

[change] See also

Personal tools
Namespaces

Variants
Actions
Getting around
Print/export
Toolbox
In other languages