Furan

Furan
Chemical nameFuran
Chemical formulaC4H4O
Molecular mass68.07 g/mol
Melting point-85.6 °C
Boiling point31.4 °C
Density0.936 g/cm3
CAS number110-00-9
SMILESC1=CC=CO1
Missing image
Furan_chemical_structure.png
Chemical structure of tetrahydrofuran

Furan, also known as furane and furfuran, is an aromatic heterocyclic organic compound, produced when wood, especially pine-wood, is distilled. Furan is a clear, colorless, very volatile and highly flammable liquid with a boiling point close to room temperature. It is toxic and may be carcinogenic. Catalytic hydrogenation (see redox) of furan with a palladium catalyst gives tetrahydrofuran.

Furan is aromatic because one of the lone pairs of electrons on the oxygen atom is delocalized into the ring, creating a 4n+2 aromatic system (see Hückel's rule) similar to benzene. This aromatic system forms two rings of electrons above and below the flat structure with no discrete double bonds. The other lone pair of electrons of the oxygen atom extends in the plane of the flat ring system. Due to its aromaticity, furan behaves not as a typical heterocyclic ether like tetrahydrofuran. It is considerably more reactive than benzene in electrophilic substitution reactions.

See also

Missing image
Chemistry-stub.png


This article about an organic compound is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

See also: Furan, Aromatic, Benzene, Benzofuran, Boiling point, CAS registry number, Carcinogenic, Catalyst, Chemical compound