1) Quick Basics (GOC Context)

  • Organic compounds: hydrocarbons and their derivatives.
  • Types: Aliphatic (open chain) and Cyclic (ring chain).
  • Saturated: only single bonds; Unsaturated: at least one double/triple bond.
  • Homocyclic: ring has only carbon; Heterocyclic: ring has O/S/N etc.

2) Aromaticity (Hückel Rule)

  • Aromatic compounds are planar, cyclic, conjugated with delocalised π electrons.
  • Must follow Hückel rule: (4n + 2) π electrons (n = 0, 1, 2…)
  • Typically resist addition and show electrophilic substitution.
  • Aromatic heterocycles: rings with hetero atoms (e.g., pyridine, pyrrole, furan, thiophene).

3) Selecting the Parent Chain

  • Choose the longest continuous carbon chain as parent.
  • For unsaturated compounds, parent chain must include the double/triple bond even if it’s not the longest chain.
  • For functional groups, choose a chain that includes the principal functional group.

4) Numbering Rules (Very Important)

  • Lowest locant rule: the first substituent gets the lowest possible number.
  • Lowest sum rule: when many substituents are present, choose numbering with the lowest sum of locants.
  • First point of difference: if locant sets tie, pick the set with the lower number at the first point of difference.
  • For alkenes/alkynes: give lowest number to the multiple bond (even if it violates saturated rules).
  • For functional groups: give lowest number to the principal functional group.

5) Writing Substituents

  • Write different substituents in alphabetical order (ignore di-, tri-, tetra- for ordering).
  • Use numerical prefixes: di-, tri-, tetra- for identical substituents.
  • Complex substituent (branched): name it separately, number from the point of attachment as 1′, and write in brackets.
  • For repeated complex substituents use: bis-, tris-, tetrakis-.

6) Naming Unsaturated Hydrocarbons

  • Use suffix: -ene (double bond), -yne (triple bond), -diene, etc.
  • Number the chain so the double/triple bond gets the lowest locant.
  • If both double and triple bonds exist, numbering generally prefers giving the double bond the lower number (common rule of thumb).

7) Functional Group Naming (Single FG)

  • Select the functional group → it decides the class suffix.
  • Number from the end nearer to the functional group so it gets the lowest locant.
  • Terminal functional groups like -CHO, -COOH, -COOR, -CONH2, -CN are typically assigned carbon number 1.
  • If multiple identical functional groups exist, use: di-, tri-, etc. (e.g., diol, dioic acid).

8) Priority Order (For Polyfunctional Compounds)

Pick one as the principal functional group (gets suffix). Others become prefixes.

General priority (high → low):

–COOH > –SO3H > Anhydride > Ester > Acid chloride > Amide > –CN > –CHO > >C=O > –OH > –NH2 > C=C > C≡C > Halo / Nitro / Alkyl

9) Replacement Nomenclature (oxa / thia / aza)

  • Used for naming chains/rings where hetero atoms replace carbon:
  • O → oxa, S → thia, Se → selena, N → aza
  • Give hetero atoms the lowest possible locants.

10) Alicyclic (Cyclo) Nomenclature

  • Ring as parent if ring carbons ≥ side-chain carbons (common rule used in naming).
  • Substituted cycloalkanes: assign numbers to give lowest set of locants; alphabetical order helps in ties.
  • For cycloalkenes, the double bond gets priority in numbering.
  • If side chain has a multiple bond or functional group, ring may be treated as substituent (rule used in many examples).

11) Bond-Line (Skeletal) Structures

  • Each line end/vertex represents a carbon.
  • Hydrogens on carbon are implied to satisfy valency (C makes 4 bonds).
  • Hetero atoms (O, N, halogens) are shown explicitly.
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