According to
IUPAC nomenclature, "isobutyl", "
sec-butyl", and "
tert-butyl" used to be allowed retained names. The latest guidance changed that: only
tert-butyl is kept as preferred prefix, all other butyl-names are removed. In the convention of
skeletal formulas, every line ending and line intersection specifies a carbon atom (unless otherwise indicated) saturated with single-linked
hydrogen atoms (unless otherwise indicated). The "R" symbol indicates any
radical or other non-specific functional group. Butyl is the largest substituent for which
trivial names are commonly used for all isomers. The butyl group's carbon that is connected to the rest (R) of the molecule is called the RI or R-prime carbon. The prefixes
sec (from "secondary") and
tert (from "tertiary") refer to the number of additional
side chains (or carbons) connected to the first butyl carbon. The prefix "iso" or "
iso" means "isolated" while the prefix
n- stands for "normal". Butan-2-yl (
sec-butyl) group is
chiral. The carbon atom at position 2 is a
stereocenter. It has four different groups attached: , , , and (the R group is not equal to those three groups). The names of the two chiral groups are: (2
S)-butan-2-yl and (2
R)-butan-2-yl. == Examples ==