aldehydin
Aldehedin is a term that appears in a limited set of sources and does not correspond to a single, widely recognized chemical compound in standard chemical literature. In many discussions, it is used as a fictional or hypothetical aldehyde-like molecule, or as a placeholder name in thought experiments concerning aldehyde chemistry or organic synthesis. Consequently, there is no universally accepted molecular structure, formula, or set of properties for aldehydin.
Etymology and interpretation: The name is formed from the aldehyde functional group (R-CHO) and a generic suffix
Possible interpretations: When encountered in non-scientific or speculative writings, aldehydin may be described as an aldehyde
Synthesis and properties: There is no standard synthesis or experimentally verified set of properties for aldehydin
See also: Aldehydes, Alkanals, Carbonyl chemistry, Fictional compounds in chemistry.
References: The term appears mainly in non-technical or fictional contexts; no peer‑reviewed, widely accepted chemical substance