Common fat names Fats are often named after their source, e.g.,
olive oil,
cod liver oil,
shea butter,
tail fat. Some have traditional names of their own, e.g., butter, lard,
ghee, and
margarine. The composition of these natural fats is somewhat variable. The
oleic acid component in
olive oil can vary from 64% to 86%.
Chemical fatty acid names Triglycerides are then commonly named as esters of those acids, as in glyceryl 1,2-dioleate 3-palmitate, the name for a brood pheromone of the honey bee. Where the fatty acid residues in a triglyceride are all the same, names like
olein (for glyceryl trioleate) and
palmitin (for glyceryl tripalmitate) are common.
IUPAC In the
International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry's (IUPAC's) general
chemical nomenclature for organic compounds, any organic structure can be named by starting from its corresponding
hydrocarbon and then specifying differences so as to describe its structure completely. For fatty acids, for example, the position and orientation of carbon-carbon double bonds is specified counting from the
carboxyl functional group. Thus, oleic acid is formally named (9
Z)-octadec-9-enoic acid, which describes that the compound has: • an 18 carbon chain ("octadec-") with the carbon of the carboxyl ("-oic acid") given the number 1 • all carbon-carbon bonds are single except for the double bond then joins carbon 9 ("9-en") to carbon 10 • the chain connects to each of the carbons of the double bond on the same side (hence,
cis, or "(9
Z)"—the "
Z" being an abbreviation for the German word
zusammen, meaning together). IUPAC nomenclature can also handle branched chains and derivatives where hydrogen atoms are replaced by other chemical groups. Triglycerides take formal IUPAC names according to the rule governing naming of esters. For example, the formal name propane-1,2,3-tryl 1,2-bis((9
Z)-octadec-9-enoate) 3-(hexadecanoate) applies to the pheromone informally named as glyceryl 1,2-dioleate-3-palmitate, and also known by other common names including 1,2-dioleoyl-3-palmitoylglycerol, glycerol dioleate palmitate, and 3-palmito-1,2-diolein.
Fatty acid code A notation specific for fatty acids with unbranched chain, that is as precise as the IUPAC one but easier to parse, is a code of the form "{N}:{D}
cis-{CCC}
trans-{TTT}", where {N} is the number of carbons (including the carboxyl one), {D} is the number of double bonds, {CCC} is a list of the positions of the
cis double bonds, and {TTT} is a list of the positions of the
trans bonds. Either or both
cis and
trans lists and their labels are omitted if there are no multiple bonds with that geometry. For example, the codes for stearic, oleic, elaidic, and vaccenic acids are "18:0", "18:1
cis-9", "18:1
trans-9", and "18:1
trans-11", respectively.
Catalpic acid, (9
E,11
E,13
Z)-octadeca-9,11,13-trienoic acid according to IUPAC nomenclature, has the code "18:3
cis-13
trans-9,11". ==Saturated and unsaturated fats==