IUPAC numerical multiplier

The numerical multiplier (or multiplying affix) in IUPAC nomenclature indicates how many particular atoms or functional groups are attached at a particular point in a molecule. The affixes are derived from both Latin and Greek.

Number Multiplier Number Multiplier
1 mono- 32 dotriaconta-
2 di- 40 tetraconta-
3 tri- 50 pentaconta-
4 tetra- 60 hexaconta-
5 penta- 70 heptaconta-
6 hexa- 80 octaconta-
7 hepta- 90 nonaconta-
8 octa- 100 hecta-
9 nona- 200 dicta-
10 deca- 300 tricta-
11 undeca- 400 tetracta-
12 dodeca- 500 pentacta-
13 trideca- 600 hexacta-
14 tetradeca- 700 heptacta-
15 pentadeca- 800 octacta-
16 hexadeca- 900 nonacta-
17 heptadeca- 1000 kilia-
18 octadeca- 2000 dilia-
19 nonadeca- 3000 trilia-
20 icosa- 4000 tetralia-
21 henicosa- 5000 pentalia-
22 docosa- 6000 hexalia-
23 tricosa- 7000 heptalia-
30 triaconta- 8000 octalia-
31 hentriaconta- 9000 nonalia-

Compound affixes

The prefixes are given from the least significant decimal digit up: units, then tens, then hundreds, then thousands. For example:

548 → octa- (8) + tetraconta- (40) + pentacta- (500) = octatetracontapentacta-
9267 → hepta- (7) + hexaconta- (60) + dicta- (200) + nonalia- (9000) = heptahexacontadictanonalia-

The numeral one

While the use of the affix mono- is rarely necessary in organic chemistry, it is often essential in inorganic chemistry to avoid ambiguity: carbon oxide could refer to either carbon monoxide or carbon dioxide. In forming compound affixes, the numeral one is represented by the term hen- except when it forms part of the number eleven (undeca-): hence

241 → hen- (1) + tetraconta- (40) + dicta- (200) = hentetracontadicta-
411 → undeca- (11) + tetracta- (400) = undecatetracta-

The numeral two

In compound affixes, the numeral two is represented by do- except when it forms part of the numbers 20 (icosa-), 200 (dicta-) or 2000 (dilia-).

Icosa- v. eicosa-

IUPAC prefers the spelling icosa- for the affix corresponding to the number twenty on the grounds of etymology. However both the Chemical Abstracts Service and the Beilstein database use the alternative spelling eicosa-.

Other numerical prefix types

There are two more types of numerical prefixes in IUPAC organic chemistry nomenclature.[1]

Numerical terms for compound or complex features

Numerical prefixes for multiplication of compound or complex (as in complicated) are created by adding kis to the basic numerical prefix, with the exception of numbers 2 and 3, which are bis- and tris-, respectively.

Number Multiplier
2 bis-
3 tris-
4 tetrakis-
...

An example is the IUPAC name for DDT.

Multiplicative prefixes for naming assemblies of identical units

Number Multiplier
5 quinque-
6 sexi-
7 septi-
8 octi-
9 novi-
10 deci-
11–9999 Ending "a" in the basic numerical prefix
is replaced with "i",
and/or "deka" is replaced with "deci".

Examples are biphenyl or terphenyl.

Etymology

"mono-" is from Greek monos = "alone". "un" = 1 and "nona-" = 9 are from Latin. The others are derived from Greek numbers.

The forms 100 and upwards are not correct Greek. In Ancient Greek, hekaton = 100, diakosioi = 200, triakosioi = 300, etc. The numbers 200-900 would be confused easily with 22 to 29 if they were used in chemistry. khīlioi = 1000, diskhīlioi = 2000, triskhīlioi = 3000, etc., and 13 to 19 are treiskaideka etc. with the Greek for "and"inserted (as in triskaidekaphobia).

gollark: We should have a classification which is just labelled "oh 343" or something.
gollark: And SCM-0001-really-bad-trust-me is, say, an animated thing switching between dark purple and black!
gollark: Oh, and we can add extra colors to annoy people!
gollark: Imagine figuring out what that meant!
gollark: But imagine how annoying it would be if an anomaly had classification "gimel-iota-eka" or something.

See also

Notes and references

  • Panico, R.; & Powell, W. H. (Eds.) (1994). A Guide to IUPAC Nomenclature of Organic Compounds 1993. Oxford: Blackwell Science. ISBN 0-632-03488-2.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: extra text: authors list (link)
  1. IUPAC Blue Book, 2013
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