The systems of chemical nomenclature developed by the
International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) have traditionally concentrated on ensuring that chemical names are unambiguous, that is that a name can only refer to one substance. However, a single substance can have more than one acceptable name, like
toluene, which may also be correctly named as "methylbenzene" or "phenylmethane". Some alternative names remain available as "retained names" for more general contexts. For example,
tetrahydrofuran remains an unambiguous and acceptable name for the common organic solvent, even if the preferred IUPAC name is "oxolane". The nomenclature goes: • Preselected names are to be used. •
Substitutive nomenclature (replacement of hydrogen atoms in the parent structure) is used most extensively, for example "ethoxyethane" instead of
diethyl ether and "tetrachloromethane" instead of
carbon tetrachloride. •
Functional class naming (also known as radicofunctional nomenclature) is preferred next. In the case of
acid anhydrides,
esters,
acyl halides and pseudohalides and
salts, this method takes precedence over substitution. • Skeletal replacement ('a', named for the suffix), if it both applies and a
heteroatom is found in a chain, is preferred over substitution. If it applies but no heteroatom is found in a chain, it is preferred over multiplicative nomenclature. Example: 3-phospha-2,5,7-trisilaoctane refers to . • Skeletal replacement mainly replaces carbon with other atoms, or in the case of
phane nomenclature, whole "
superatom" rings. It also includes more complex replacements, such as the
lambda convention. • Multiplicative nomenclature is to be preferred over simple substitutive if it can be used. This is the nomenclature with an apostrophe after numbers such as 4'; it allows multiple occurrences of the principal characteristic group or compound class to be treated together. Example: 4,4′-sulfanediyldibenzoic acid refers to . The following are available, but not given special preference: • Conjunctive nomenclature is available, but substitutive, multiplicative, or skeletal should be preferred. Example: benzene-1,3,5-triacetic acid should instead be named 2,2′,2′′-(benzene-1,3,5-triyl)triacetic acid. • Additive and subtractive operations remain available as with the general case. For example, one keeps changing "ane" into "ene" for double bonds. Additive operations generally have better names derived from the above rules, such as phenyloxirane for
styrene oxide. == Retained names ==