the bottle i saw said it does...question is what can be done with it...and how stable it is if it is stored for some time...
You mean a bottle of Plant/ weed killer? Thats not Diethylamide.. Is a Alkli < or a salt in the Weed be Gone.. Id stop picking up any old chemical off the store shelf and get a better Search engine if I was you...
I don't really know what you are talking about...what i saw was labgrade diethylamide,might have been a little old but still but the search engine advice is a good one...still if anybody has anymore info about the stuff i'd be greatful
i wonder if this is an actuall constraint of the molecule or rather that it is not common practice to name it in a non-trivial fashion (e.g. IUPAC consistant). The only requirement to conform to that name is a carbonyl connected to an amine group (i.e. the nitrogen)., the amine would then have ethane moieties bifurcating from the nitrogen atom. in any case i have my doubts that it would be useful in a nucleophillic attack by the carbonyl onto the bulk of a molecule. i think that it would yield a complex biologically inactive product.
I think orison is right. http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/tandf/gsch/2005/00000017/00000008/art00005
As the post after mine was onto the Nitrogen (there is a name for the pair Carbon/Nitrogen) at the end of the compound, but I dont know what it is. I havent taken chemisrty.. But I too think its why LSD still remains organic even through chemical synthesis. Because it end result is a Salt.