IUPAC nomenclature is accompanied by typographic conventions. A summary of key rules is provided below. •
Capital letters: Common chemical names are written in lowercase:
halomon, manzamine A. Trademarked or commercial names use capital letters and must include the appropriate trademark symbol (® or ™): Tylenol®, Aspirin™. If a name appears at the beginning of a sentence or in a title, it should be capitalized regardless of its typographic convention. •
Italics: Foreign phrases are typically italicized (or written in
roman type if they already appear in italics):
tert-butyl chloride. However, many English-language chemistry journals discourage this practice. Italics are also used for: • Lowercase letters in ring fusions: thieno[3,2-
b]
furan • The letters
o, m, and
p when used for
ortho, meta, and para • Element symbols indicating substitution sites:
N-benzyl,
O-acetyl, etc. • The symbol
H when it marks the position of a
hydrogen atom: 3
H-pyrrole • Structural and
stereochemical descriptors:
sec, tert, cis, trans, r, c, t, R, S, R⁎, S⁎, rel, Z, E, abeo, retro. (Note: iso, cyclo, homo, nor, and seco are not italicized.) •
Sugars: The D and L stereodescriptors are typically written in a font size 2 points smaller than the rest of the text: 1-O-acetyl-D-glucose. •
(+) and (−) signs: The minus sign (−) used in stereochemical descriptors should be an en dash (–), not a hyphen (-), to ensure typographic balance with the plus sign: (−)-tartrate •
Vowel elision: Systematic names can lead to double vowels such as aa or ao. IUPAC rule R-0.1.7 addresses these cases. The following is a simplified summary: • Elision of a occurs: • When followed by a vowel in heterocyclic names: tetrazole • When followed by a or o in multiplicative prefixes: pentaoxyde → pentoxyde, tetraol → tetrol • Elision does not occur in replacement nomenclature: 1,4,7,10-tetraoxaundecane •
Punctuation: • No
spaces are used between affixes or after commas separating locants: 2-bromooctane, N-nitrosourea • No space or hyphen is placed between the final prefix and the name of the parent
alkane: N-nitrosourea • In polycyclic compounds,
locants inside brackets are separated by periods (not commas), and no spaces are placed around the brackets: 1,8-Diazabicyclo(5.4.0)undec-7-ene|1,8-diazabicyclo[5.4.0]undec-7-ene • For heterocycles, locants for heteroatoms use commas, and brackets may be separated from the rest of the name by spaces or hyphens:[1,3,2]oxazaphosphepane or 1,3,2-oxazaphosphepane
Capitalization Capitalizing the first letter or the entirety of a systematic chemical name follows a few straightforward rules. Prefixes such as
sec, tert, ortho, meta, para, α, β, D, L, (+), (−), (R), (S), or locants are not considered part of the main name. Therefore, it is the first letter of the main part of the name that should be capitalized, if needed. Some prefixes, especially those never italicized, such as cyclo, iso, neo, or spiro, are considered part of the main name and should be capitalized accordingly. Examples: • 2-
aminoethanol must be written at the beginning of a sentence as "
2-Aminoethanol", because the main part of the name (excluding the locant) is aminoethanol. •
N,N-
diisopropylethylamine becomes "
N,N-Diisopropylethylamine" for the same reason. The locants (
N) remain capitalized and italicized. •
isopropanol becomes "Isopropanol", not isoPropanol, because "iso" is part of the main name.
Alphabetical order for chemical names Following the capitalization rules, chemical names are alphabetized based on the main part of the name, not on prefixes or locants. This means indexing and alphabetical sorting should ignore non-essential prefixes and focus on the core name — i.e., the part that would be capitalized at the beginning of a sentence. This approach became necessary when chemical literature began including indexes. For example, the molecule
butanol should consistently be sorted under B—not under 1 (for
1-butanol) or N (for n-butanol). == See also ==