Swim was just looking through some web pages and found these Chemical analysts papers. On 2 of them they said Hydroxylimide(intermediates for ketamine) or hydroxylimide Hydrochloride(intermediates for Ketamine).
But they both had the same chemical formula. (either C13H16CLNO (freebase) or C13H16CLNO - HCL) Does this make sense? can somebody explain the structural differences between these and real ketamine (C13H16CLNO - HCL)
All seem to be the same product but under different names. (or a free base of the hydrochloride salt) Swim doesn't understand please help...
(https://www.thevespiary.org/rhodium/Rhodium/hive/hiveboard/picproxie_docs/000414092-file_bgkm.gif)The hydroxylimide is the compound to the right of the ketamine molecule. It can form a salt with hydrochloric acid, and thus it is available with or without a unit of HCl attached to the molecule.
Reference:
https://www.thevespiary.org/rhodium/Rhodium/chemistry/pcp/ketamine.html (https://www.thevespiary.org/rhodium/Rhodium/chemistry/pcp/ketamine.html)
shouldn't that be the compound to the right of the ketamine molecule ? :)
That's fully correct, I'll edit my post :-[