I am struggling to figure this most useful and common group which is which and when is it called.
For example: 5,5-DIPHENYLHYDANTOIN; 57-41-0; Diphenylhydantoin; Dilantin Picture attached.
This is called diphenyl, so I see the six carbon rings with H:C in the 1:1 so its not cyclo hexane, but there are no OH groups that make benzene into phenol. Why is this not called dibenzene... ?
Also if you are looking at the diagram and you don't see the circle in the hexagon ring or the double bonds( = ) in three spots of the ring are they still there but just not illustrated?
As far as organic chemistry goes should we in proctise ignore cyclohexane C6H12 because its just not that common as a precursor or functional group or useful reagent to be used in the lab? Cyclohexane is found in gasoline and petro fuels but as I start my college education not worry about it too much, because while it looks like benzene its not? I like to try and figure out the names of things especially while looking at the shape of a drug vs. what it does to your body (another future college career path to me).