The rules
The Geneva rules for nomenclature were described in 62 paragraphs. Some of these rules were: * Saturated hydrocarbons would have names ending in -ane. * The traditional names of the first 4 in the series was to be kept (methane, ethane, propane and butane) * Longer chains were to have their names derived from the appropriate Greek numeral e.g. pent (pentane), hex (hexane) etc. * When naming compounds with side chains the name would be determined by the longest straight chain with a substituted group e.g. methyl propane (CH3CH(CH3)CH3) * The endings ene and ine were indicative of the presence of a double and triple bond respectively. * For closed chain hydrocarbons the term "cyclo" was to be used meaning what was known as hexamethylene (C6H12) would now be called cyclohexaneAttendees
Further reading
References
Chemical nomenclature {{chemistry-stub