Naming of benzene derivatives « on: December 19, 2005, 04:04:30 AM » Hi all, I have problems in naming the attached compounds. I believe they are called butenyl-semi-benzene or so. Please kindly teach me how to name each of them correctly. Thank you very much. Compounds_to_nam...
You might findthis linkuseful for naming compounds. Trimethylbenzenes isn't expensive. You can check it from Sigma Aldrich. Production is also quite easy. Atleast in theory. You can find numerical prefixes from internet but I put them here also just in case: ...
Learn about naming aromatic compounds. Understand the aromatic ring functional group, examples of aromatic rings including benzene derivatives, and...
Naming Organic Compounds: Beyond saturated hydrocarbons Cyclic compounds Add cyclo- to beginning of name if the alkane is known to be arranged in a circle (CnH2n). No position number is needed if only one alkyl group is attached. Aromatichydrocarbon, or benzene (C6H6: Electron orbitals overlap...
If one has to do the naming angles worksheets correctly, then one should know how to measure angles. Angles can be measured correctly by the use of a protractor. The students have to place the protractor along the baseline of the given figure, start reading from zero degrees of the protract...
Dihydrogen monoxide is some layman's obvious attempt to try and fabricate a scientific name for water, but didn't know the basic principles of naming compounds! The correct 'scientific' name for water is hydrogen oxide! H2O is a 2 element, nonmetal-nonmetal compound and the prefixes mon-, ...
And for the benzene part, actually I'm not too sure how to name them. In my notes for aromatic compounds, we can either end we a benzene or use a phenyl instead. But I'm not sure which to use sometimes. If it has chlorine and methane then I'll follow the simple rules to get ...