Module 3: Nomenclature
This module, Organic Nomenclature, aligns with the AAMC MCAT Content Category 4D: Structure, Function, and Reactivity of Organic Compounds, which includes mastery of systematic naming as a foundational skill. While the MCAT does not expect memorization of obscure IUPAC rules, it does require fluency in interpreting, constructing, and reasoning through the names of organic compounds—particularly those related to functional groups, substituents, and parent chains. A strong grasp of nomenclature allows students to visualize molecular structures from names, compare isomers, and follow complex reaction pathways. This module focuses on the most MCAT-relevant naming conventions, including alkanes, alkenes, alkynes, alcohols, aldehydes, ketones, carboxylic acids, esters, amides, and amines, with attention to naming priorities, stereochemical descriptors (R/S and E/Z), and common naming pitfalls. Every concept presented is tied directly to AAMC-style passage reasoning and question formats.
Why Nomenclature Matters on the MCAT
Knowing how to name organic molecules — and more importantly, how to decode names into structures — is a fundamental MCAT skill. While you’re rarely asked to give full IUPAC names from scratch, you must be able to:
- Interpret IUPAC names into structures
- Identify functional groups from naming conventions
- Recognize parent chains, substituents, and stereochemistry from naming cues
- Spot naming traps or inconsistencies in answer choices
IUPAC vs. Common Names
- IUPAC: The International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry provides a standardized naming system used universally in textbooks and on the MCAT.
- Common names: Still appear on the MCAT (e.g., formic acid, acetone, toluene, isopropyl alcohol), so you must recognize both.
Key Features of an IUPAC Name
An IUPAC name typically has 5 components, ordered as follows:
[Prefix(es)] – [Parent chain] – [Saturation & functional group suffix] – [Highest-priority functional group ending]
| Component | Function | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Prefix | Substituents or branches | methyl-, bromo- |
| Parent Chain | Main carbon backbone (longest continuous chain) | but-, pent- |
| Unsaturation | Indicates double/triple bonds | -ene, -yne |
| Functional Group | Highest priority group with suffix (e.g., -ol, -al) | -ol, -one |
| Locants | Numbers to show position of groups | 2-pentanol |
Steps for IUPAC Naming: Core Algorithm
Here is a foolproof 6-step system used to name any organic molecule:
Step 1: Identify the Longest Carbon Chain
- This becomes your parent chain
- Must include the highest-priority functional group
- Choose the chain with most substituents if tied
Step 2: Number the Chain
- Start from the end closest to the highest-priority group
- If no high-priority group, start from end closest to first substituent or multiple bond
- Goal: Give the lowest possible numbers to important features
Step 3: Identify and Name Substituents
- Common ones: methyl-, ethyl-, bromo-, chloro-, nitro-
- Each gets a locant (number indicating carbon it’s on)
Step 4: Assign Locants to Double/Triple Bonds
- Double bonds: use –ene
- Triple bonds: use –yne
- If both are present: use –en–yne, with numbering indicating both locations
Step 5: Add Functional Group Suffix
- Find the highest-priority functional group (see table below)
- Assign its suffix (e.g., –ol, –al, –one, –oic acid)
- Drop final “e” from hydrocarbon if suffix begins with a vowel
Step 6: Put It All Together
- List substituents in alphabetical order
- Combine all parts with correct punctuation:
- Use hyphens (-) between numbers and letters
- Use commas (,) between numbers
- Do not leave spaces

Functional Group Priority Table
| Priority | Functional Group | Suffix | Prefix (if not highest) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Carboxylic acid | –oic acid | carboxy– |
| 2 | Ester | –oate | alkoxycarbonyl– |
| 3 | Acid chloride | –oyl chloride | chloroformyl– |
| 4 | Amide | –amide | carbamoyl– |
| 5 | Nitrile (cyano) | –nitrile | cyano– |
| 6 | Aldehyde | –al | formyl– |
| 7 | Ketone | –one | oxo– |
| 8 | Alcohol | –ol | hydroxy– |
| 9 | Amine | –amine | amino– |
| 10 | Alkene | –ene | – |
| 11 | Alkyne | –yne | – |
| 12 | Alkane | –ane | – |
| 13 | Ether, Halide, Nitro | No suffix | methoxy–, bromo–, nitro– |
MCAT Organic Nomenclature Tip: When naming, only the highest-priority group gets the suffix. Others become prefixes.
MCAT Organic Nomenclature Key Priority Rules:
- Only one group gets to be the suffix — the rest become prefixes.
- The higher the priority, the more likely it is to end the IUPAC name.
- Functional group suffixes replace the terminal
-ein the hydrocarbon name (but not if they begin with a consonant — e.g., ketone = pentanone, not pentaneone).
Alkanes and Substituent Naming Rules
What Are Alkanes?
Alkanes are the simplest class of hydrocarbons — they contain only single bonds between carbon atoms and follow the general molecular formula:
$$
C_nH_{2n+2}
$$
They are:
- Saturated hydrocarbons (max hydrogen per carbon)
- Nonpolar
- Undergo combustion and substitution reactions
Examples of Straight-Chain Alkanes:
| Number of Carbons | Name | Molecular Formula |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Methane | CH₄ |
| 2 | Ethane | C₂H₆ |
| 3 | Propane | C₃H₈ |
| 4 | Butane | C₄H₁₀ |
| 5 | Pentane | C₅H₁₂ |
| 6 | Hexane | C₆H₁₄ |
| 7 | Heptane | C₇H₁₆ |
| 8 | Octane | C₈H₁₈ |
| 9 | Nonane | C₉H₂₀ |
| 10 | Decane | C₁₀H₂₂ |
MCAT Organic Nomenclature Tip: Memorize the first 10 alkane names. They’re used constantly in both IUPAC names and MCAT passages.
Branched Alkanes and Alkyl Groups
When alkanes form branches, the side chains are named as alkyl groups — that is, they are named like alkanes but with a –yl suffix instead of –ane.
| Alkyl Group | Formula | Derived from | Example Name |
|---|---|---|---|
| Methyl | –CH₃ | Methane | 2-methylbutane |
| Ethyl | –CH₂CH₃ | Ethane | 3-ethylhexane |
| Propyl | –CH₂CH₂CH₃ | Propane | 2-propylpentane |
| Isopropyl | –CH(CH₃)₂ | Propane | 3-isopropylhexane |
| Butyl | –CH₂CH₂CH₂CH₃ | Butane | 2-butylpentane |
| Tert-butyl | –C(CH₃)₃ | Butane | 2-tert-butylhexane |
MCAT Organic Nomenclature Tip: Recognize common alkyl groups like isopropyl, isobutyl, sec-butyl, and tert-butyl — these often appear as distractors or in naming tasks.
Naming Simple Branched Alkanes: Step-by-Step
Let’s break this into a process using a worked-out example:
Example Molecule:
A six-carbon chain (hexane) with:
- A methyl group at carbon 2
- An ethyl group at carbon 3
Naming Steps:
- Longest chain = 6 carbons → hexane
- Substituents:
- 2-methyl
- 3-ethyl
- Alphabetize substituents:
- Ethyl comes before methyl
- Combine into final name:
- 3-ethyl-2-methylhexane
Rules to Remember:
- Use lowest possible numbers when assigning substituents
- Alphabetize substituent names (not including prefixes like di-, tri-)
- If multiple identical substituents exist, use prefixes (di-, tri-, tetra-), but these don’t affect alphabetical order
Numbering Tie-Breakers
When more than one numbering scheme gives the same lowest number for the first substituent, compare the next one:
- Example: 2,3-dimethylbutane vs. 3,4-dimethylbutane → Choose 2,3
- MCAT may present you with two correct chains — only one will follow all rules
Summary: Alkane Naming Flow
- Identify the longest continuous carbon chain.
- Number the chain to give substituents the lowest numbers.
- Name and number all substituents.
- Alphabetize substituents (ignore di-/tri- when alphabetizing).
- Combine everything into a single IUPAC name.
Naming Alkenes and Alkynes (Unsaturation)
Guide to hydrocarbons with double and triple bonds for MCAT Organic Nomenclature.
What Are Alkenes and Alkynes?
Alkenes and alkynes are unsaturated hydrocarbons — they contain double or triple bonds between carbon atoms, respectively.
| Type | Bond Type | General Formula |
|---|---|---|
| Alkene | C=C double | CnH2nC_nH_{2n} |
| Alkyne | C≡C triple | CnH2n−2C_nH_{2n-2} |
- Alkenes exhibit cis/trans (or E/Z) isomerism if there are distinct substituents on the double bond.
- Both alkenes and alkynes are considered functional groups when naming organic molecules.
Basic Naming Rules
Step 1: Identify the Parent Chain
- Must include the double or triple bond
- Choose the longest chain that includes the unsaturation
Step 2: Number the Chain
- Number so that the multiple bond gets the lowest possible number
- If there’s a tie, use substituent priorities next
Step 3: Assign Suffix and Locant
- Use the suffix:
- –ene for alkenes
- –yne for alkynes
- Use a number to indicate where the double or triple bond starts
- For molecules with both double and triple bonds, use the combined suffix –en–yne
MCAT Style: “2-butyne” means a triple bond starting at carbon 2
MCAT Organic Nomenclature Examples:
Example 1: But-2-ene
- Four carbon chain (butane base)
- Double bond between C-2 and C-3
- Final name: but-2-ene
Example 2: Hex-1-yne
- Six carbon chain
- Triple bond starting at carbon 1
- Final name: hex-1-yne
Example 3: 4-methylpent-2-yne
- Parent chain = pentane (5 carbons)
- Triple bond starts at C-2 → pent-2-yne
- Methyl group at C-4
- Final name: 4-methylpent-2-yne
Example 4: 2-methylpent-1-en-4-yne
- Parent = pentane (5 carbon chain)
- Double bond at C-1, triple bond at C-4
- Methyl group at C-2
- Final name: 2-methylpent-1-en-4-yne
MCAT Organic Nomenclature Tip: For -en-ynes, the double bond gets priority in numbering.
Unsaturation Priority Recap:
| Functional Group | Naming Suffix | Priority Order (in numbering) |
|---|---|---|
| Alkene (C=C) | –ene | Higher than alkyne |
| Alkyne (C≡C) | –yne | Lower than alkene |
| Alkane (C–C) | –ane | Lowest |
Naming Functionalized Hydrocarbons
Alcohols, Ketones, Aldehydes, Carboxylic Acids, and More
What Are Functionalized Hydrocarbons?
A functionalized hydrocarbon contains one or more functional groups that alter its reactivity and naming priority. These groups replace or modify the standard hydrocarbon name with special suffixes and rules.
On the MCAT:
- You will not be expected to name highly complex polyfunctional molecules.
- But you must recognize how functional groups change naming and interpret IUPAC names back into structures.
General Naming Strategy for Functionalized Compounds
When a functional group is present:
- Find the longest carbon chain that includes the functional group.
- Number the chain so that the functional group gets the lowest possible number.
- Replace the terminal “-e” of the alkane name with the appropriate suffix.
- Any lower-priority groups (e.g., halides, alkyls, alcohols if not highest) become prefixes.
Most Common Functional Groups and Their Naming Rules
| Functional Group | IUPAC Suffix | Prefix (if not highest) | Example Name |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alcohol (–OH) | -ol |
hydroxy- |
Propan-2-ol |
| Aldehyde (–CHO) | -al |
formyl- |
Butanal |
| Ketone (C=O) | -one |
oxo- |
Pentan-2-one |
| Carboxylic Acid (–COOH) | -oic acid |
carboxy- |
Ethanoic acid (acetic) |
| Amine (–NH₂) | -amine |
amino- |
Propan-1-amine |
| Amide (–CONH₂) | -amide |
carbamoyl- |
Butanamide |
| Nitrile (–C≡N) | -nitrile |
cyano- |
Propanenitrile |
Example 1: Butan-2-ol
- 4 carbon chain = butane
- OH group at carbon 2 = butan-2-ol
Example 2: 3-hydroxybutanal
- 4 carbon chain with an aldehyde on C-1 (gets suffix –al)
- OH group on C-3 = hydroxy-
- Final name: 3-hydroxybutanal
Example 3: 2-aminopropanoic acid
- 3 carbon chain with carboxylic acid = propanoic acid
- NH₂ group at C-2 = 2-amino
- Final name: 2-aminopropanoic acid (aka alanine!)
Priority Note:
When multiple functional groups are present, use only one suffix — the highest-priority group takes it, and all others become prefixes.
For example:
- A compound with a ketone and a carboxylic acid is named as a carboxylic acid, with the ketone named as a prefix (oxo-).
Special Case: Dropping the “-e”
When the suffix starts with a vowel (e.g., –ol, –al, –one), the terminal “-e” of the alkane is dropped:
- Butane + –ol → butanol
- Hexane + –one → hexanone
Naming Molecules with Multiple Functional Groups
Overview
When a molecule contains two or more different functional groups, we must:
- Determine the highest-priority functional group
- Use its suffix as the primary naming ending
- Convert all other functional groups into prefixes
- Ensure correct numbering: the chain is numbered to give the highest-priority group the lowest possible locant
This is essential MCAT material — you must recognize which group takes naming priority and how others are named in relation to it.
Functional Group Priority List (Simplified)
| Priority Rank | Functional Group | Suffix (used if highest) | Prefix (if not highest) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Carboxylic acid (–COOH) | –oic acid | carboxy– |
| 2 | Ester (–COOR) | –oate | alkoxycarbonyl– |
| 3 | Acid chloride (–COCl) | –oyl chloride | chloroformyl– |
| 4 | Amide (–CONH₂) | –amide | carbamoyl– |
| 5 | Nitrile (–C≡N) | –nitrile | cyano– |
| 6 | Aldehyde (–CHO) | –al | formyl– |
| 7 | Ketone (C=O) | –one | oxo– |
| 8 | Alcohol (–OH) | –ol | hydroxy– |
| 9 | Amine (–NH₂) | –amine | amino– |
| 10 | Alkene (C=C) | –ene | – |
| 11 | Alkyne (C≡C) | –yne | – |
| 12 | Alkane (C–C) | –ane | – |
| 13 | Halides, nitro, ether | no suffix | fluoro–, nitro–, methoxy– |
Example 1: 4-hydroxybutanoic acid
- Functional groups: –COOH (carboxylic acid) and –OH (alcohol)
- Carboxylic acid wins → name ends in –oic acid
- Alcohol becomes prefix: hydroxy–
- Chain: 4 carbon atoms → butanoic acid
- OH on carbon 4 → 4-hydroxy
Final Name: 4-hydroxybutanoic acid
Example 2: 3-oxo-2-pentenoic acid
- Functional groups: –COOH, C=C, C=O
- Carboxylic acid is highest → suffix = –oic acid
- Ketone becomes oxo– prefix
- Alkene becomes –ene in the name
Final Name: 3-oxo-2-pentenoic acid
Example 3: 2-amino-3-hydroxybutanoic acid
- Functional groups: –COOH, –OH, –NH₂
- Carboxylic acid wins → base = butanoic acid
- OH → 3-hydroxy–
- NH₂ → 2-amino–
Final Name: 2-amino-3-hydroxybutanoic acid
This is the IUPAC name for serine, an amino acid.
MCAT Organic Nomenclature Tips:
- Be ready to identify the highest-priority group quickly — questions often ask “What is the correct name?” with competing suffixes.
- If all groups are lower-priority, the one that comes first alphabetically is used as the prefix (not the suffix!).
- Stereochemistry and numbering rules still apply (covered in Module 2).
Naming Cyclic Compounds and Rings
Aromatic and non-aromatic ring structures in IUPAC nomenclature
What Are Cyclic Compounds?
Cyclic compounds are ring-shaped molecules — either aliphatic (non-aromatic) or aromatic (e.g., benzene). Ring structures are prevalent in biomolecules, pharmaceuticals, and MCAT-style questions.
Naming Non-Aromatic Rings (Cycloalkanes)
The base name for a ring is formed by adding “cyclo” before the alkane name.
| Ring Size | Name | Formula |
|---|---|---|
| 3 | Cyclopropane | C₃H₆ |
| 4 | Cyclobutane | C₄H₈ |
| 5 | Cyclopentane | C₅H₁₀ |
| 6 | Cyclohexane | C₆H₁₂ |
| 7 | Cycloheptane | C₇H₁₄ |
Example 1: 1-chlorocyclopentane
- 5-membered ring = cyclopentane
- Cl attached at position 1 → 1-chloro
Final name: 1-chlorocyclopentane
Numbering in Substituted Cycloalkanes
- Begin numbering at the highest-priority functional group.
- If only alkyl groups are present, begin at the group that gives the lowest total numbers.
- Ring size is the parent if it’s longer than any side chain.
Disubstituted and Trisubstituted Rings
- Use numbers to indicate position of each substituent.
- Follow alphabetical order for naming.
Example: 1-ethyl-3-methylcyclohexane
Aromatic Rings (Benzene and Derivatives)
Aromatic rings, especially benzene, follow their own naming rules.
Simple Benzene Derivatives:
| Substituent | IUPAC Name | Common Name (if applicable) |
|---|---|---|
| –CH₃ | Methylbenzene | Toluene |
| –OH | Hydroxybenzene | Phenol |
| –NH₂ | Aminobenzene | Aniline |
| –COOH | Benzenecarboxylic acid | Benzoic acid |
| –NO₂ | Nitrobenzene | — |
Numbering Substituents on Benzene:
Use 1,2–, 1,3–, 1,4– or their common names:
| Position | IUPAC Form | Common Prefix |
|---|---|---|
| 1,2– | ortho– | o– |
| 1,3– | meta– | m– |
| 1,4– | para– | p– |
Example: 1,4-dichlorobenzene = para-dichlorobenzene
Example: 3-nitroaniline
- Benzene with an –NH₂ at position 1 and –NO₂ at position 3
- Final name: 3-nitroaniline
MCAT Organic Nomenclature Pitfalls to Avoid:
- Don’t assume the ring is the parent unless it is larger or functionally dominant.
- Aromatic rings with multiple groups may require alphabetization and lowest numbering rules.
- Don’t forget common names like phenol, toluene, aniline are allowed on the MCAT and often appear.
Naming Flowchart, Tips, and Common Pitfalls
Full Naming Algorithm (Step-by-Step)
- Find the Longest Carbon Chain
- Must contain the highest-priority functional group and any multiple bonds.
- Number the Chain
- Give lowest numbers to:
- Highest-priority group
- Multiple bonds (double/triple)
- Substituents (if ties)
- Give lowest numbers to:
- Identify and Name Substituents
- Use correct prefixes: methyl-, ethyl-, bromo-, hydroxy-, etc.
- Use di-, tri-, tetra- for multiples of the same group (not in alphabetical order)
- Assign Suffix
- Based on highest-priority functional group
- Drop the “e” from alkane if suffix begins with a vowel (e.g., –ol, –al)
- Assemble the Name
- Prefixes (in alphabetical order)
- Numbers for positions
- Suffix as the ending
Common Naming Suffixes Recap
| Group | Suffix | Prefix (if not highest) |
|---|---|---|
| Alkane | –ane | — |
| Alkene | –ene | — |
| Alkyne | –yne | — |
| Alcohol | –ol | hydroxy– |
| Ketone | –one | oxo– |
| Aldehyde | –al | formyl– |
| Carboxylic Acid | –oic acid | carboxy– |
| Amine | –amine | amino– |
| Halide | — | fluoro–, chloro–, etc. |
Common Mistakes on the MCAT
| Mistake | How to Avoid It |
|---|---|
| Choosing the wrong parent chain | Always include the highest-priority group and longest path |
| Incorrect numbering | Functional groups > double/triple bonds > substituents |
| Alphabetizing prefixes incorrectly | Ignore di-, tri-, etc., but not iso-, sec-, tert- |
| Using multiple suffixes in one name | Only the highest-priority group gets a suffix |
| Forgetting to drop the final “e” when needed | Drop “-e” before vowel-starting suffixes like –ol, –al |
Final MCAT Tips
- You won’t be asked to name overly complex molecules, but you will be tested on:
- Interpreting IUPAC names
- Recognizing correct vs. incorrect naming
- Identifying structures from names
- Matching priority to suffix usage
- Learn to spot common functional group patterns and aromatic rings quickly
IUPAC Naming Strategy Flowchart: A Step-by-Step Guide to Organic Nomenclature

