Azoparaffin

/ˌæzoʊˈpærəfɪn/ noun

An organic compound formed by combining an azo group (N=N) with a paraffin (alkane) hydrocarbon, sometimes used in explosives and industrial chemistry.

From 'azo-' (N=N bond) + 'paraffin' (from Latin parum affinis, little affinity, referring to alkane hydrocarbons). Developed in 19th and 20th-century organic synthesis.

📖 Full word page — etymology, 47 translations, audio 🔑 Get Free API Key — 50 lookups/day 📚 Read the Docs — integrate Word Orb