Section 18.1 Nomenclature 733
Notice that the terminal “e”is not removed in hexanedial; the “e”is removed only to
avoid two successive vowels.
If the aldehyde group is attached to a ring, the aldehyde is named by adding
“carbaldehyde”to the name of the cyclic compound.
In Section 8.1, we saw that a carbonyl group has a higher nomenclature priority
than an alcohol or an amine group. However, all carbonyl compounds do not have the
same priority. The nomenclature priorities of the various carbonyl groups are shown
in Table 18.1.
If a compound has two functional groups, the one with the lower priority is indicated
by its prefix. The prefix of an aldehyde oxygen that is part of the parent hydrocarbon is
“oxo.”The prefix of a one-carbon aldehyde group that is not part of the parent hydrocar-
bon is “formyl.”
H
C
O
CH 3
H
trans-2-methylcyclohexanecarbaldehyde benzenecarbaldehyde
benzaldehyde
systematic name:
common name:
C
O
increasing
priority
Table 18.1 Summary of Functional Group Nomenclature
Class
Carboxylic acid
Ester
Amide
Nitrile
Aldehyde
Ketone
Alcohol
Amine
Alkene
Alkyne
Alkane
Ether
Alkyl halide
Suffix Name
-oic acid
-oate
-amide
-nitrile
-al
Aldehyde -al
-one
-ol
-amine
-ene
-yne
-ane
—
—
Prefix Name
Carboxy
Alkoxycarbonyl
Amido
Cyano
Formyl
Oxo
Hydroxy
Amino
Alkenyl
Alkynyl
Alkyl
Alkoxy
Halo
( CH O)
( O)
Oxo( O)
HC
H OCH 3
O
ethyl 4-formylhexanoate
O O
CH 3 CH 2 CHCH 2 CH 2 OCH 2 CH 3
3-hydroxybutanal methyl 5-oxopentanoate
CH 3 CHCH 2 H
C
O
OH
C
O
CH 3 CHCH 2 H CH 3 CHCH 2
C
O
H H
H
C
O
systematic name:
common name:
3-chlorobutanal
-chlorobutyraldehyde
3-methylbutanal
isovaleraldehyde
Cl CH 3 O
O
hexanedial