Systematic element name
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In chemistry, heavy transuranic elements receive a permanent trivial name and symbol only after their synthesis has been confirmed. This has been a protracted and highly political process in some cases (see element naming controversy). In order to discuss newly synthesized and as-yet unsynthesized elements without ambiguity, the IUPAC assigns a temporary systematic name and symbol to such elements. The origin of this idea came from the successful development of regular rules for the naming of organic compounds containing carbon.
The IUPAC rules
| digit | root | symbol |
|---|---|---|
| 0 | nil | n |
| 1 | un | u |
| 2 | b(i) | b |
| 3 | tr(i) | t |
| 4 | quad | q |
| 5 | pent | p |
| 6 | hex | h |
| 7 | sept | s |
| 8 | oct | o |
| 9 | en(n) | e |
- If bi or tri is followed by the ending ium (i.e. the last digit is 2 or 3), the result is '-bium' or -'trium', not '-biium' or '-triium'.
- If enn is followed by nil (i.e. the sequence -90- occurs), the result is '-ennil-', not '-ennnil-'.
All elements up to and including atomic number 111 have received permanent trivial names and symbols, so the use of systematic names and symbols is recommended only for elements 112 and above. Therefore in practice, systematic names are just those with 3-letter symbols.
Examples
| Element 115: Element 123: Element 208: Element 970: | un + un + pent + ium = un + bi + tri + ium = bi + nil + oct + ium = enn + sept + nil + ium = | ununpentium (Uup) unbitrium (Ubt) biniloctium (Bno) ennseptnilium (Esn) |
- ''Note: These examples show conjectured elements. As of 2006, ununhexium, element 116, is the highest confirmed element known.
Trivia
- There is one element whose systematic name is very similar to its permanent trivial name (the symbols are identical). That is element 8: "octium" (O), more commonly known as oxygen (O). If systematic names require three letters, this would be "Nno" (nilniloctium). However, leading zeroes are not written when writing eight (008), so one might also argue against writing leading nils.
- There are 702 possible combinations of letters given single-letter and double-letter naming used in official element names, fewer than the 999 possible names using the triple-letter systematic element naming scheme.
External links
- [The IUPAC recommendation]. Untitled draft, March 2004. (PDF, 143 kB).
- [Systematic naming of Elements with Atomic Numbers Greater than 110] (PDF, 41 kB).
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