Anhydridization

/ˌænhaɪˈdrɪdɪˈzeɪʃən/ noun

Definition

The chemical process of removing water to form an anhydride, or the state of being converted into an anhydride compound.

Etymology

From anhydride (lacking water) + -ization (process suffix). Anhydride comes from Greek an- (without) + hydro (water) + -ide (chemical compound suffix). The term emerged in 19th-century chemistry as scientists studied how removing water changed chemical properties.

Kelly Says

When you remove water from certain organic compounds, you create anhydrides, and this process powers everything from making dyes to industrial polymers—it's literally how chemists reshape molecules by subtraction!

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