arylgrupper
Arylgrupper, in English commonly called aryl groups, are substituent fragments derived from arenes by removal of a hydrogen atom. They function as attached aromatic moieties in a wide range of organic molecules. The most familiar example is the phenyl group (C6H5–). Other examples include naphthyl, anthryl, and various substituted arenes.
The aryl group is attached to the rest of the molecule via a carbon–carbon bond, usually at
In chemistry, aryl groups participate in a range of reactions, most notably carbon–carbon bond-forming cross-couplings such
Applications span pharmaceuticals, agrochemicals, dyes, and organic materials, where aryl groups serve to modulate binding, spectra,