Hydroxyl vs Oxyl - What's the difference?
hydroxyl | oxyl | Related terms |
(chemistry) A univalent radical or functional group (–OH) in organic chemistry; present in alcohols, phenols, carboxylic acids and certain other classes of compounds.
(chemistry) A compound or radical bound to an oxygen by a single bond
*{{quote-book, 2007, Albert W. Girotti & Paolo U. Giacomoni, chapter=Lipid and Protein Damage Provoked by Ultraviolet Radiation: Mechanisms of Indirect Photooxidative Damage, Biophysical and Physiological Effects of Solar Radiation on Human Skin
, passage=If a Type I- or Type II-derived LOOH encounters a ligated Fe2+ or Cu+ on a membrane, it invariably undergoes one-electron reduction to an oxyl radical (LO-)
(chemistry, obsolete) An acid anhydride
*{{quote-journal, 1865, W.A. Miller, On Chemical Nomenclature, The London, Edinburgh and Dublin Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science
, passage=The formula (CaO, CO2) would represent calcic carbonate as a compound of a base and an oxyl . }}
Oxyl is a related term of hydroxyl.
In chemistry terms the difference between hydroxyl and oxyl
is that hydroxyl is a univalent radical or functional group (–OH) in organic chemistry; present in alcohols, phenols, carboxylic acids and certain other classes of compounds while oxyl is a compound or radical bound to an oxygen by a single bond.hydroxyl
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(en noun)Derived terms
{{der3, hydroxylamine , hydroxylammonium nitrate , hydroxylapatite , hydroxylate , hydroxylbastnasite , hydroxyl ion}}oxyl
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