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Nomenclature of Alkanes and the IUPAC System

IUPAC System

  • Name of an alkane with an unbranched chain of carbon atoms

    • Prefix that indicates the number of carbon atoms

    • Suffix -ane to show that the compound is a saturated hydrocarbon (alkane)

  • Name of an alkane with a branched chain

    • Parent name that indicates the longest chain of carbon atoms in the compound

    • Substituent names that indicate the groups bonded to the parent chain

      • Give each substituent a number to indicate the carbon atom to which the substituent is bonded - use a hyphen to connect the number to the name

      • If there's one substituent, number the parent chain from the end that gives the substituent the lower number

      • If there are two or more identical substituents, number the parent chain from the end that gives the lower number to the substituent encountered first

        • The number of times the substituent occurs is indicated by the prefix di, tri, etc; use a comma to separate position numbers

      • If there are two or more different substituents, list them in alphabetical order and number the chain from the end that gives the lower number to the substituent encountered first

        • If there are different substituents in equivalent positions on opposite ends of the parent chain, give the substituent that comes first in the alphabet the lower number

      • Alphabetize the name of the constituents and then add the prefixes di, tri, etc

      • When there are two or more parent chains of equal length, choose the parent chain with the greater number of constituents

  • Alkyl group: a substituent group derived from an alkane by the removal of a hydrogen atom

    • Commonly represented by the symbol R-

    • Named by dropping the -ane and adding -yl

  • Substituents with unbranched chains are named by replacing the -ane with -yl

General IUPAC System

  • The name given to any compound with a chain of carbon atoms consists of 3 parts: prefix, infix, and suffix

    • Prefix: indicates the number of carbon atoms in the parent chain

    • Infix: indicates the nature of the carbon-carbon bonds in the parent chain

      • -an-:all single bonds

      • -en-: one or more double bonds

      • -yn-: one or more triple bonds

    • Suffix: indicates the class of the compound

      • -e: hydrocarbon

      • -ol: alcohol

      • -al: aldehyde

      • -one: ketone

      • -oic acid: carboxylic acid

Classification of Carbon and Hydrogen Atoms

  • Primary carbon: carbon bonded to one carbon

  • Secondary carbon: carbon bonded to 2 carbons

  • Tertiary carbon: carbon bonded to 3 carbons

  • Quaternary carbon: carbon bonded to 4 carbons

  • Primary hydrogen: hydrogen bonded to a primary carbon

  • Secondary hydrogen: hydrogen bonded to a secondary carbon

  • Tertiary hydrogen: hydrogen bonded to a tertiary carbon

  • Quaternary hydrogen: hydrogen bonded to a quaternary carbon

TR

Nomenclature of Alkanes and the IUPAC System

IUPAC System

  • Name of an alkane with an unbranched chain of carbon atoms

    • Prefix that indicates the number of carbon atoms

    • Suffix -ane to show that the compound is a saturated hydrocarbon (alkane)

  • Name of an alkane with a branched chain

    • Parent name that indicates the longest chain of carbon atoms in the compound

    • Substituent names that indicate the groups bonded to the parent chain

      • Give each substituent a number to indicate the carbon atom to which the substituent is bonded - use a hyphen to connect the number to the name

      • If there's one substituent, number the parent chain from the end that gives the substituent the lower number

      • If there are two or more identical substituents, number the parent chain from the end that gives the lower number to the substituent encountered first

        • The number of times the substituent occurs is indicated by the prefix di, tri, etc; use a comma to separate position numbers

      • If there are two or more different substituents, list them in alphabetical order and number the chain from the end that gives the lower number to the substituent encountered first

        • If there are different substituents in equivalent positions on opposite ends of the parent chain, give the substituent that comes first in the alphabet the lower number

      • Alphabetize the name of the constituents and then add the prefixes di, tri, etc

      • When there are two or more parent chains of equal length, choose the parent chain with the greater number of constituents

  • Alkyl group: a substituent group derived from an alkane by the removal of a hydrogen atom

    • Commonly represented by the symbol R-

    • Named by dropping the -ane and adding -yl

  • Substituents with unbranched chains are named by replacing the -ane with -yl

General IUPAC System

  • The name given to any compound with a chain of carbon atoms consists of 3 parts: prefix, infix, and suffix

    • Prefix: indicates the number of carbon atoms in the parent chain

    • Infix: indicates the nature of the carbon-carbon bonds in the parent chain

      • -an-:all single bonds

      • -en-: one or more double bonds

      • -yn-: one or more triple bonds

    • Suffix: indicates the class of the compound

      • -e: hydrocarbon

      • -ol: alcohol

      • -al: aldehyde

      • -one: ketone

      • -oic acid: carboxylic acid

Classification of Carbon and Hydrogen Atoms

  • Primary carbon: carbon bonded to one carbon

  • Secondary carbon: carbon bonded to 2 carbons

  • Tertiary carbon: carbon bonded to 3 carbons

  • Quaternary carbon: carbon bonded to 4 carbons

  • Primary hydrogen: hydrogen bonded to a primary carbon

  • Secondary hydrogen: hydrogen bonded to a secondary carbon

  • Tertiary hydrogen: hydrogen bonded to a tertiary carbon

  • Quaternary hydrogen: hydrogen bonded to a quaternary carbon