Anthanthrene

Anthanthrene is a polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon.[1] According to the International Agency for Research on Cancer, as of 2006[update] there was "limited evidence in experimental animals" that it is a carcinogen.[2]This article about a hydrocarbon is a stub.You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
Skeletal formula
Skeletal formula
Ball-and-stick model of the anthanthrene molecule
Preferred IUPAC nameCAS NumberChemSpiderECHA InfoCardPubChemCompTox DashboardSMILESChemical formulaMolar massMelting pointSolubility in waterMagnetic susceptibilitystandard statepolycyclic aromatic hydrocarbonInternational Agency for Research on CancercarcinogenPolycyclic aromatic hydrocarbonsButaleneAzuleneNaphthaleneAcenaphtheneAcenaphthyleneAnthraceneFluorenePhenalenePhenanthreneBenz[a]anthraceneBenzo[a]fluoreneBenzo[c]fluoreneBenzo[c]phenanthreneChryseneFluoranthenePyreneTetraceneTriphenyleneTricyclobutabenzeneBenz[e]acephenanthryleneBenzopyreneBenzo[a]pyreneBenzo[e]pyrene6H-Benzo[cd]pyrene(Olympicene)Benzo[a]fluorantheneBenzo[b]fluorantheneBenzo[j]fluorantheneBenzo[k]fluoranthenetrans-BicaliceneDibenz[a,h]anthraceneDibenz[a,j]anthracenePentacenePerylenePiceneTetraphenyleneBenzo[ghi]peryleneCorannuleneDibenzopyrenesHexaceneTrianguleneZethreneCoroneneDicoronyleneDiindenoperyleneHeptaceneHexabenzocoroneneHexa-cata-KekuleneOvaleneRubiceneRubreneSumaneneSuperphenaleneTrinaphthyleneTruxeneCirculeneCyclaceneHelicenePhenacenehydrocarbon