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Organic chemicals, nomenclature

After World War II the International Union of Chemistry became the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (known in the chemical com munity as the lUPAC) Since 1949 the lUPAC has is sued reports on chemical nomenclature on a regular basis The most recent lUPAC rules for organic chem istry were published in 1993 The lUPAC rules often offer several different ways to name a single com pound Thus although it is true that no two com... [Pg.78]

P. Eresenius, Organic Chemical Nomenclature-. Introduction to the Basic Principles, John WUey Sons, Inc., New York, 1989 (trans. from German ed., 1983). [Pg.122]

Note. The appropriate prefix is thio, not thia the latter is used in systematic organic chemical nomenclature to indicate replacement of CH2 by S. [Pg.86]

First, name the intermediates using knowledge of simple organic chemistry and chemical nomenclature. [Pg.23]

The following paragraphs introduce some basic areas of organic chemical nomenclature. Further details can be found in Chemical Substances Index Names and Nomenclature of Organe Chemistry listed and end of this entry. [Pg.1170]

Acyclic Hydrocarbons, A knowledge of the structural features of hydrocarbon skeletons is basic to the understanding of organic chemical nomenclature. The generic name of saturated acyclic hydrocarbons, branched or unbranched, is alkane. The term saturated is applied to hydrocarbons containing no double or triple bonds. [Pg.1170]

The IUPAC publishes the definitive rules for chemical nomenclature. The IUPAC name is the official name for an organic compound. All other names are called trivial or common names. While the details can sometimes be very challenging, the basic rules are really quite simple. [Pg.285]

Additional items of concern in Patterson s paper delineating IUPAC s system of organic chemical nomenclature include ... [Pg.23]

P. Ftesetrius, Organic Chemical Nomenclature, Prentice-Hall, Upper Saddle River, NJ (1989). [Pg.10]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.2 ]




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