benzothiazine
Benzothiazine refers to a family of heterocyclic compounds consisting of a benzene ring fused to a thiazine ring, a six-membered ring that contains one nitrogen and one sulfur. The fused bicyclic core can be aromatic when the rings are unsaturated, and the class also includes hydrogenated derivatives known as dihydrobenzothiazines. The exact arrangement of the nitrogen and sulfur atoms in the thiazine ring gives rise to several positional isomers, so benzothiazines encompass multiple structural forms.
Chemical properties of benzothiazines arise from the combination of the benzene ring and the heteroatomic thiazine
Synthesis of benzothiazines is described by various routes in the chemical literature. Common strategies include cyclization
Applications and significance: Benzothiazines are explored as scaffolds in medicinal chemistry, with derivatives investigated for a