In organic chemistry, atoms other than carbon and hydrogen are generally referred to as heteroatoms. The most common heteroatoms are nitrogen, oxygen and sulfur. Now I present to you an article called Thermal reactions of organic nitrogen compound. I. I-Methylpyrrole, published in 1958, which mentions a compound: 616-43-3, mainly applied to , Name: 3-Methyl-1H-pyrrole.
A flow method was used at 475-700°. At 475-575° the reaction was a homogeneous 1st-order isomerization, 1-methylpyrrole → 2-methylpyrrole → 3-methylpyrrole. The Arrhenius equation for this reaction, based on the disappearance of 1-methylpyrrole, is k = 2.39 × 1012e(-54,800/RT). Above 575° there was decomposition to give a complex mixture of reaction products.
Here is just a brief introduction to this compound(616-43-3)Name: 3-Methyl-1H-pyrrole, more information about the compound(3-Methyl-1H-pyrrole) is in the article, you can click the link below.
Reference:
Synthesis and Crystal Structure of a Chiral C3-Symmetric Oxygen Tripodal Ligand and Its Applications to Asymmetric Catalysis,
Chiral lanthanide(III) complexes of sulphur–nitrogen–oxygen ligand derived from aminothiourea and sodium D-camphor-β-sulfonate