Substituted amphetamine

Revision as of 16:21, 20 August 2012 by WikiBot (talk | contribs) (Robot: Automated text replacement (-{{SIB}} +, -{{EH}} +, -{{EJ}} +, -{{Editor Help}} +, -{{Editor Join}} +))
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search


The substituted amphetamines are a family of amphetamine-based stimulants, hallucinogens, and other recreational drugs. They each have a methyl group on the alpha carbon, often have methoxy groups on the 2 and 5 carbons, and have variant groups on the 3, 4, and 5 carbons. Examples include DOB and DOI. Many substituted amphetamines are amphetamine analogues of the 2C's.

Amphetamine, the basis of all substituted amphetamines.
File:Ganesha chem.png
Ganesha, one of the less common substituted Amphetamines
Nomenclature R3 R4 R5 2C analog Structure
3C-BZ OCH3 OC(CH)5 OCH3 NA File:3C-BZ.png
Aleph H SCH3 H 2C-T File:Aleph.png
Aleph-2 H SCH2CH3 H 2C-T-2 File:Aleph-2.png
Aleph-4 H SCH(CH3)2 H 2C-T-4 File:Aleph-4.png
Aleph-6 H SC(CH)5 H NA File:Aleph-6.png
Aleph-7 H S(CH2)2CH3 H 2C-T-7 File:Aleph-7.png
DOB H B H 2C-B File:R-DOB chemical structure.png
DOI H I H 2C-I
DOM H CH3 H 2C-D File:R-DOM chemical structure.png
DOBU H (CH2)3CH3 H NA File:DOBU.png
Ganesha CH3 CH3 H 2C-G File:Ganesha chem.png


See also

de:Phenylalkylamine#Amphetamine


Template:WikiDoc Sources