Organic chemistry: Nomenclature for aldehydes, ketones, carboxylic acids, and ethers. General names for the types of carboxylic acid derivatives
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(1) Aldehyde nomenclature
(2) When to use E/Z, cis/trans, or R/S naming
(3) Ketone nomenclature
(4) Continued
(5) Carboxylic acid nomenclature
(6) Continued
(7) General names for the types of carboxylic acid derivatives. Ether nomenclature
(8) Ether nomenclature continued
@chan0948 no you can't....the cyclohexane is a substituent. THe keytone takes precedence.
Edgerich 11 months ago
at 5:59, can i call it 'acetylcyclohexane' ?
chan0948 1 year ago
@shelteringshade Z and E is used instead of cis and trans for trisub and tetrasub. Z= Cis : Mneumonic: Zame zide (same side) E= Trans
Sameer3292 1 year ago
@Sameer3292 Could you explain more please? I've never heard of E- and Z- naming... What do they stand for? What do they mean?
shelteringshade 1 year ago
Cis and Trans can be used only when the double bond is disubstituted. For trisubstituted and tetrasubstituted you use E and Z. Just wanted to share my knowledge !!!
Sameer3292 2 years ago
Perhaps...
cohi27 2 years ago