Naming Citric Acid (1 Viewer)

ChrisChrisau

Member
Joined
Aug 3, 2008
Messages
40
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
2009
Hi all,

For citric acid, I was wondering the reason behind it being named "2-hydroxypropane-1,2,3-tricarboxylic acid" as opposed to "1,2,3-tricarboxylic-2-hydroxypropane"

The reason I ask is that I was under the impression that when naming hydrocarbons, the segments are put in alphabetical order, without the prefixes.

Thanks!
Chris
 

live.life

New Member
Joined
Oct 21, 2008
Messages
5
Gender
Female
HSC
2009
My understanding is that it's in alphabetical order but you try to put the smaller numbers groups at the front. Thus the 2-hydroxy blah blah blah. But I could be wrong...In fact this is highly likely.

When you look at the structural formula, it makes more sense the way it is named. I think so anyway...

But also hydrocarbons consist of ONLY hydrogen and carbon. Citric Acid has oxygen too. Perhaps this is also an explanation.


My chemistry teacher told us "There's an exception to every rule in chemistry. And even that rule has an exception", so this could be chemistry doing what is does best and being confusing...

Hope it helps...
 

ChrisChrisau

Member
Joined
Aug 3, 2008
Messages
40
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
2009
All very likely answers... particularly the last haha

Thanks for the help :)
 

chuboy

Member
Joined
May 14, 2009
Messages
121
Location
Northern NSW
Gender
Male
HSC
2009
For citric acid, I was wondering the reason behind it being named "2-hydroxypropane-1,2,3-tricarboxylic acid" as opposed to "1,2,3-tricarboxylic-2-hydroxypropane"

The reason I ask is that I was under the impression that when naming hydrocarbons, the segments are put in alphabetical order, without the prefixes.
You are correct, however carboxylic acid groups take precedence over the hydroxypropane, therefore it comes last. Link
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 1)

Top