H2O, dihydrogen oxide; water
H2O ¼ [OH2], oxidane (parent hydride name), dihydridooxygen
1H2O, diprotium oxide;
(1H2)water
D2O ¼ 2H2O, dideuterium oxide;
(2H2)water
T2O ¼ 3H2O, ditritium oxide;
(3H2)water
source:
http://old.iupac.org/publications/books/rbook/Red_Book_2005.pdf
page 306
The IUPAC name for water is "water". Other names for it include: Dihydrogen monoxide Hydrogen monoxide Hydrogen oxide (Because "hydrogen dioxide" is normally called "hydrogen peroxide") Hydrogen hydroxide Hydroxylic acid (Although this one is kind of redundant... water inside water?)
The IUPAC name of water is simply water, or the equivalent in other languages.
The IUPAC name is: oxonium
the common name is: hydronium
2,7-dimethyl-4-octyne :)
Glycerol is also referred to as glycerine or glycerin. The IUPAC name for glycerol is propane-1,2,3-triol.
N,N-Dimethylaniline
Alpha amino ethanoic acid or 2-aminoethanoic acid
2-propanone. The oxygen is doube bonded to the second carbon.
Iupac name of COCl2
Ethanol is the proper IUPAC name already!
it's not organic so i don't think that it has an IUPAC name.
The IUPAC name is nitric acid - HNO3.
IUPAC name of aniline is phenylamine or benzenamine.
IUPAC name for fruits? fruits are made of thousands, if not millions of different compounds so IUPAC can't really name them
toluene is a common name - The IUPAC name for toluene is methylbenzene.
The IUPAC name for tartaric acid is 2,3-dihydroxybutanedioic acid.
The IUPAC name for picric acid is 2,4,6 trinitrophenol
CH3CH2CH2I is Iodopropane.
Preferred IUPAC name: Carbon monoxide
IUPAC: Sodium iodide