namelyanonymous
Member
In one of my textbooks, the final rule for naming if there is more than one possible name is:
"The correct name is the one in which the lowest locant is assigned to the functional group cited first as a prefix" i.e. it goes by alphabetical order
In another, the final rule is:
"The correct name is the one that gives the lowest number to the most electronegative halogen"
These contradict in some cases, so I'm unsure which one to go by.
E.g., how would you name:
CH3-CHBr-CH2-CHCl-CH3
If you go by the rule from the first book, then it would be called 2-bromo-4-chloropentane
If you go by the rule in the second book, then it would be called 4-bromo-2-chloropentane (as Cl is more electronegative than Br)
Which one do I use??
Thanks in advance!
"The correct name is the one in which the lowest locant is assigned to the functional group cited first as a prefix" i.e. it goes by alphabetical order
In another, the final rule is:
"The correct name is the one that gives the lowest number to the most electronegative halogen"
These contradict in some cases, so I'm unsure which one to go by.
E.g., how would you name:
CH3-CHBr-CH2-CHCl-CH3
If you go by the rule from the first book, then it would be called 2-bromo-4-chloropentane
If you go by the rule in the second book, then it would be called 4-bromo-2-chloropentane (as Cl is more electronegative than Br)
Which one do I use??
Thanks in advance!