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  1. Thiocyanate - Wikipedia

    Thiocyanate shares its negative charge approximately equally between sulfur and nitrogen. As a consequence, thiocyanate can act as a nucleophile at either sulfur or nitrogen—it is an ambidentate …

  2. Thiocyanate | CNS- | CID 9322 - PubChem

    Thiocyanates are a group of compounds formed from a combination of sulfur, carbon, and nitrogen. Thiocyanates are found in various foods and plants and are produced primarily from the reaction of …

  3. Thiocyanate - chemeurope.com

    Common compounds include the colourless salts potassium thiocyanate and sodium thiocyanate. Organic compounds containing the functional group SCN are also called thiocyanates.

  4. THIOCYANATE Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster

    The meaning of THIOCYANATE is a compound that consists of the chemical group SCN bonded by the sulfur atom to a group or an atom other than a hydrogen atom.

  5. Thiocyanate - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics

    Thiocyanate [SCN−], the anion of thiocyanic acid, is an important waste product from the chemical industry, it is present in various food items, it may be added to dairy milk to promote bacteriostatic …

  6. Thiocyanate | Springer Nature Link

    In chemistry, thiocyanate is the small molecule SCN − (the conjugate base of thiocyanic acid HSCN). Organic compounds containing the functional group SCN are also called thiocyanates.

  7. Thiocyanate – Knowledge and References – Taylor & Francis

    Thiocyanate is an anion that is commonly found on mucosal surfaces and is a breakdown product of CNglcs and glucosinolates. It may serve as a substrate for EPO and LPO as part of host defenses.

  8. Inorganic Metal Thiocyanates - PMC

    Metal thiocyanates were some of the first pseudohalide compounds to be discovered and adopt a diverse range of structures. This review describes the structures, properties, and syntheses of the …

  9. Thiocyanates - American Elements

    Thiocyanates (also known as rhodanides or sulfocyanates) are salts or esters of thiocyanic acid containing the thiocyanate ion, [SCN]-. Isothiocyanates are similar compounds containing the [NCS]- …

  10. Organic thiocyanates - Wikipedia

    Electrochemical reduction typically converts thiocyanates to thioates and cyanide, although sometimes it can replace the thiocyanate group as a whole with hydride.