1,2,3,4-tetrahydronaphthalene.
This compound is dibromomethane.
The IUPAC name for pentane is pentane. Pentane is a saturated chain of five carbon (C) atoms with the formula C5H12. Specifically, using the IUPAC name, pentane refers to the n-pentane isomer.
The IUPAC name is azane.
The traditional name is hydrazine and the systematic name according to IUPAC is diazane.
By definition, phenol is hydroxybenzene. Phenol is a common name for the compound. Its IUPAC name would be benzenol, derived in the same manner as the IUPAC names for aliphatic alcohols. Read more: http://www.cliffsnotes.com/WileyCDA/CliffsReviewTopic/Phenols.topicArticleId-23297,articleId-23262.html#ixzz0QeV6MoPL Hope this helps!
organic compound
This compound is dibromomethane.
ammonium chloride
The correct name after IUPAC nomenclature is triberyllium dinitride.
The traditional name is hydrazine and the systematic name according to IUPAC is diazane.
IUPAC naming only applies to compounds. The IUPAC name for chlorine is chlorine. In nature chlorine exists as a diatomic compound Cl2 called dichlorine.
The IUPAC name is formonitrile, the common used name is hydrogen cyanide.
IUPAC naming only applies to compounds. The IUPAC name for chlorine is chlorine. In nature chlorine exists as a diatomic compound Cl2 called dichlorine.
methyl butanoate
This is not a true compound but is mixture of Ammonium fluoride and Hydrogen fluoride , NH4F . HF
Benzene is NOT an IUPAC name but a common one... it's IUPAC name can be written as- cyclohexa-1,3,5-trien.
The name after IUPAC is nitrogen trifluoride (in English).