| 2C-T-7 | |
|---|---|
| Chemical name | 2-*ethanamine |
| Chemical formula | C13H21NO2S |
| Molecular mass | ? |
| Melting point | ? |
| CAS numbers | 207740-26-9 |
| SMILES | COc1cc(SCCC)c(cc1CCN)OC |
2C-T-7 is a psychedelic phenethylamine and is sometimes used as an entheogen. It was presumably first synthesized in 1986 by Alexander Shulgin. It has structural and pharmacodynamic properties similar to the drugs Mescaline, MDMA, 2C-T-2 and 4-MTA.
2C-T-7 is 4-(n)-propylthio-2,5-dimethoxyphenethylamine with the formula C12H21O2NS. The full name of the chemical is 2-*ethanamine.
2C-T-7 is a hallucinogenic phenethylamine. In his book PIHKAL (Phenethylamines I Have Known and Loved), Shulgin lists the dosage range as 10-30mg. 2C-T-7 is generally taken orally, and produces psychedelic and entheogenic effects that last 8 to 12 hours.
The mechanism that produces the hallucinogenic and entheogenic effects of 2C-T-7 is unknown.
Around the year 2000, 2C-T-7 began to change from an obscure chemical to a drug used at parties and clubs in North America and Europe as it became available through a number of grey-market commercial vendors.
There have been at least three reported deaths related 2C-T-7 use, and in January of 2002, Rolling Stone Magazine published an article about 2C-T-7 entitled "The New (legal) Killer Drug".
On September 20, 2002, 2C-T-7 was classified as a Schedule I substance in the United States by an emergency ruling by the DEA.