Concept explainers
(a)
Interpretation:
The structure for the given trivial name is to be drawn, and the correct IUPAC name is to be written.
Concept introduction:
The trivial names are commonly used names which are not systematic ones. Many trivial names are accepted by IUPAC.
In naming ester, the alkyl group is cited first, followed by the carboxylate group separated by a space. Thus, the general form of an ester name is alkyl alkanoate. The alkyl group bonded to the oxygen atom in ester and alkanoate is the part of carbonyl group. The
The root name is established by identifying the longest carbon chain or a ring containing the functional group. Remove the e from the normal ane, ene, or yne ending, and add the suffix that corresponds to the highest-priority functional group. Number the carbon chain in a way that the functional group and the substituents attached get the lowest number. The position of the functional group and substituents on the parent chain or ring is indicated by the respective locant number just before the suffix. Prefixes are used to denote the number of identical substituents. The substituents are written in alphabetical order when writing the IUPAC name.
(b)
Interpretation:
The structure for the given trivial name is to be drawn, and the correct IUPAC name is to be written.
Concept introduction:
The trivial names are commonly used names which are not systematic ones. Many trivial names are accepted by IUPAC.
In naming ester, the alkyl group is cited first, followed by the carboxylate group separated by a space. Thus, the general form of an ester name is alkyl alkanoate. The alkyl group bonded to the oxygen atom in ester and alkanoate is the part of carbonyl group. The alkan is the root name, and the suffix oate is added to the root name for the functional group ester.
The root name is established by identifying the longest carbon chain or a ring containing the functional group. Remove the e from the normal ane, ene, or yne ending, and add the suffix that corresponds to the highest-priority functional group. Number the carbon chain in a way that the functional group and the substituents attached get the lowest number. The position of the functional group and substituents on the parent chain or ring is indicated by the respective locant number just before the suffix. Prefixes are used to denote the number of identical substituents. The substituents are written in alphabetical order when writing the IUPAC name.
(c)
Interpretation:
The structure for the given trivial name is to be drawn, and the correct IUPAC name is to be written.
Concept introduction:
The trivial names are commonly used names which are not systematic ones. Many trivial names are accepted by IUPAC.
In naming ester, the alkyl group is cited first, followed by the carboxylate group separated by a space. Thus, the general form of an ester name is alkyl alkanoate. The alkyl group bonded to the oxygen atom in ester and alkanoate is the part of carbonyl group. The alkan is the root name, and the suffix oate is added to the root name for the functional group ester.
The root name is established by identifying the longest carbon chain or a ring containing the functional group. Remove the e from the normal ane, ene, or yne ending, and add the suffix that corresponds to the highest-priority functional group. Number the carbon chain in a way that the functional group and the substituents attached get the lowest number. The position of the functional group and substituents on the parent chain or ring is indicated by the respective locant number just before the suffix. Prefixes are used to denote the number of identical substituents. The substituents are written in alphabetical order when writing the IUPAC name.
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Chapter F Solutions
ORG CHEM W/ EBOOK & SW5 + STUDY GUIDE
- %Reflectance 95 90- 85 22 00 89 60 55 50 70 65 75 80 50- 45 40 WA 35 30- 25 20- 4000 3500 Date: Thu Feb 06 17:21:21 2025 (GMT-05:0(UnknownD Scans: 8 Resolution: 2.000 3000 2500 Wavenumbers (cm-1) 100- 2981.77 1734.25 2000 1500 1000 1372.09 1108.01 2359.09 1469.82 1181.94 1145.20 1017.01 958.45 886.97 820.49 668.25 630.05 611.37arrow_forwardNonearrow_forwardCH3 CH H3C CH3 H OH H3C- -OCH2CH3 H3C H -OCH3 For each of the above compounds, do the following: 1. List the wave numbers of all the IR bands in the 1350-4000 cm-1 region. For each one, state what bond or group it represents. 2. Label equivalent sets of protons with lower-case letters. Then, for each 1H NMR signal, give the 8 value, the type of splitting (singlet, doublet etc.), and the number protons it represents. of letter δ value splitting # of protons 3. Redraw the compound and label equivalent sets of carbons with lower-case letters. Then for each set of carbons give the 5 value and # of carbons it represents. letter δ value # of carbonsarrow_forward
- Nonearrow_forwardCarbohydrates- Draw out the Hawthorne structure for a sugar from the list given in class. Make sure to write out all atoms except for carbons within the ring. Make sure that groups off the carbons in the ring are in the correct orientation above or below the plane. Make sure that bonds are in the correct orientation. Include the full name of the sugar. You can draw out your curve within the text box or upload a drawing below.arrow_forwardHow many milliliters of 97.5(±0.5) wt% H2SO4 with a density of 1.84(±0.01) g/mL will you need to prepare 2.000 L of 0.110 M H2SO4? If the uncertainty in delivering H2SO4 is ±0.01 mL, calculate the absolute uncertainty in the molarity (0.110 M). Assume there is negligible uncertainty in the formula mass of H2SO4 and in the final volume (2.000 L) and assume random error.arrow_forward
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- Organic Chemistry: A Guided InquiryChemistryISBN:9780618974122Author:Andrei StraumanisPublisher:Cengage LearningChemistry: Principles and PracticeChemistryISBN:9780534420123Author:Daniel L. Reger, Scott R. Goode, David W. Ball, Edward MercerPublisher:Cengage Learning
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