{| class="wikitable floatright" style="text-align:center; font-size:90%;" |Structural formula |104x104px |100x100px |100x100px |107x107px |- |Name |FluoromethaneMethyl fluoride |ChloromethaneMethyl chloride |BromomethaneMethyl bromide |IodomethaneMethyl iodide |- |Melting point |−137,8 °C |−97,4 °C |−93,7 °C |−66 °C |- |Boiling point |−78,4 °C |−23,8 °C |4,0 °C |42 °C |- |Space-filling model |90x90px |110x110px |120x120px |130x130px |}
{| class="wikitable floatright" style="text-align:center; font-size:90%;" |Structural formula |104x104px |100x100px |100x100px |107x107px |- |Name |FluoromethaneMethyl fluoride |ChloromethaneMethyl chloride |BromomethaneMethyl bromide |IodomethaneMethyl iodide |- |Melting point |−137,8 °C |−97,4 °C |−93,7 °C |−66 °C |- |Boiling point |−78,4 °C |−23,8 °C |4,0 °C |42 °C |- |Space-filling model |90x90px |110x110px |120x120px |130x130px |}
The monohalomethanes are organic compounds in which a hydrogen atom in methane is replaced by a halogen. They belong to the haloalkanes or to the subgroup of halomethanes.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).