Methiodide

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In organic chemistry, a methiodide is a chemical derivative produced by the reaction of a compound with methyl iodide. Methiodides are often formed through the methylation of tertiary amines:

R3N + CH3I → (CH3)R3N+I

Whereas the parent amines are hydrophobic and often oily, methiodides, being salts, are somewhat hydrophilic and exhibit high melting points. Methiodides exhibit altered pharmacological properties as well.

Examples include:

Tertiary phosphines and phosphite esters also form methiodides.[2]

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI