From the beginning of documented history, the human race
has sought to classify and label chemical compounds, even before these
compounds were properly understood. Urea is one example of a complex chemical
compound named after where it was originally found (in urine). Naming compounds
in this manner was acceptable when the number of known compounds was small.
When it became apparent that there existed an infinite number of compounds, a
new naming system had to be developed in order to distinguish the compounds
from each other. Nomenclature of alkanes, or saturated hydrocarbons, is no
exception.
Straight-chain
alkanes are named according to the number of carbon atoms they contain. The
prefixes below make the basic part of naming fairly easy. Once the number of
carbons in the chain has been determined, the appropriate prefix can be picked
and combined with the suffix -ane.
Number of Carbons (n)
|
Name
|
Formula (CnH2n+2)
|
1
|
Methane
|
CH4
|
2
|
Ethane
|
C2H6
|
3
|
Propane
|
C3H8
|
4
|
Butane
|
C4H10
|
5
|
Pentane
|
C5H12
|
6
|
Hexane
|
C6H14
|
7
|
Heptane
|
C7H16
|
8
|
Octane
|
C8H18
|
9
|
Nonane
|
C9H20
|
10
|
Decane
|
C10H22
|
11
|
Undecane
|
C11H24
|
12
|
Dodecane
|
C12H26
|
If you remove a hydrogen from an alkane, the partial
structure becomes an alkyl group. Alkyl groups are named by replacing the –ane ending with an –yl ending. For example if you remove a hydrogen atom from methane
the partial structure becomes methyl. Alkyl groups are not stable compounds by
themselves, they are parts of larger compounds. Hence methyl is only one part
of 4-methylhexane.
The name
of an alkane consists of four parts:
locant—prefix—parent--suffix. Locant refers to the location of the substituents
(the smaller groups branching off from the main carbon chain), the prefix
denotes the substituents in the molecule, parent refers to the number of
carbons in the longest chain, and the suffix identifies the primary functional
group within the molecule.
To
examine how these components are found, take a look at the following skeletal
structure.
Step
1: find the longest continuous carbon chain in the molecule. It is
acceptable to “round corners” to find the longest chain. In this molecule's
case, there are several options, all yielding the same carbon chain length.
There
are two different ways to obtain a 7-carbon chain. By convention, the chain
with the most branching should be selected. Both options in this case yield the
same number of branches off the parent chain. Either numbered chain can be
used. For simplicity, the red numbered chain will be selected as the parent
chain for discussion. There are seven carbons. Our “parent” is heptane.
Step
2: number the chain, placing “1” at the end of the chain that is closet to
a substituent. This particular
molecule's main carbon chain can be numbered two different ways.
Notice
that if we start from the left, the first substituent is at “2”. If we start
from the top, the first substituent reached is at carbon “4”. The blue-numbered
chain is the correct way to number this alkane because the first substituent
reached has the lowest number. If the first substituent reached has the same
number regardless of which end of the chain was used as a starting point, the
substituent locants are added together and the chain with the lowest number is
the correct chain. For example, an alkane could be named 2,4,5-trimethylhexane,
or 2,3,5-trimethylhexane. The second option is preferred, as 2,3,5 has a lower
sum than 2,4,5.
Step
3: identify substituents and provide each with a locant, and a prefix if
necessary. The “locant” is merely the number on our properly numbered carbon
chain where the substituent is located.
There
are two methyl groups on the main chain, at “2” and “3”. Our locant is thus
2,3-, and our multiplier prefix is “di” because there are two methyl groups.
All together, this is denoted as: 2,3-dimethyl. Take note that if there were
two methyl groups at the same locant (for example, two methyl groups at “2”)
the proper way to denote the groups would not be 2-dimethyl. It would be
2,2-dimethyl because we have to account for both methyl groups.
Other
prefixes include “tri” and “tetra” for 3 groups and 4 identical groups,
respectively.
Step
4: name complex substituents. In this molecule there is a complex
substituent at carbon 4. This substituent is not a simple chain. It is structured
as a molecule in itself. Therefore it must be named as if it were another
molecule and should be numbered and named as such, but with an -yl ending. This
complex substituent is 4-(1,1-dimethylmethane). This is also more commonly
known as 4-isopropyl.
Step
5: put the locants, prefixes, and parent together to create the entire
name. From the previous sections the following components were found:
-
the parent is heptane.
-
there are two methyl groups, denoted
as “2,3-dimethyl.”
-
there is one complex substituent
named “4-isopropyl.”
-
the primary functional group is an
alkane, so the suffix will be “ane.”
To
arrange all of these pieces into one name, they must be alphabetized. The
multiplier prefixes do not count when alphabetizing, so the “di” in “2,3-dimethyl”
does not count, but the “methyl” component does. In a complex substituent,
however, the first letter counts even if there is a prefix. Thus “isopropyl”
comes before “dimethyl” because “i” comes before “m”. This results in the
following name:
4-isopropyl-2,3-dimethylheptane
There
are a few exceptions to the naming scheme. There are several simpler-branched
alkyl groups that have common names that are not systematic.
These
common names are acceptable to use and can be alphabetized by their names.
There is one exception. Those common group names that begin with an italicized
“tert” or “sec” do not count towards alphabetization. For example, in tert-Pentyl,
the “tert” would not matter when alphabetizing, but “Pentyl” would. The
prefixes “tert” and “sec” merely refer to whether the carbon connected to the
rest of the molecule is a secondary or tertiary carbon. A secondary carbon has
two other carbons attached to it; a tertiary carbon has three other carbons
attached to it.
A final
evaluation should be made regarding the substituents of the molecule. The
substituents may not all be alkyl groups, but an alcohol or a halogen. Many of
these extra “things” in the carbon chain are considered “functional groups.”
Functional groups are groups of atoms, in a specific pattern, that have
characteristic chemical behavior. Below are the most common functional groups.