Journal of Notes and Correspondence: An International Sugar Scale

Nov 17, 2009 - Journal of Notes and Correspondence: An International Sugar Scale .... must implement a worker and community chemical safety regulation...
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Jan., 1919

T H E J O U R N A L OF I N D U S T R I A L A N D ENGINEERING CHEMISTRY

73

Salts of organic bases with hydrochloric acid should be called portant to be exact with figures. Our experience in editing Chemical Abstracts proves this assertion over and over again. hydrochlorides (not hydrochlorates nor chlorhydrates). Similarly hydrobromide and hydriodide (not hydroiodide) are prefGood English in chemical literature, particularly in naming erable. ,compounds, needs cultivation. Sucrose is preferable to saccharose or cane sugar. A rather common practice among American chemists and one The Organic Division chose a good time to start a movement for better nomenclature and i t seems to me that while correcting which does not seem good is the use of the word body when chemical comfiound or chemical substance is meant. It is de.ourselves in regard to the benzene hydrocarbons we would do sirable to distinguish between a physical body and a chemical well to give thought t o other needed reforms. It seems as substance or compound. The fact that the Germans rather though such a statement should be accompanied by some specific frequently use “Korper” for “chemical compound” has probably recommcmdations. I am not an authority, but possibly the influenced this not incorrect but undh-able use of “body” in English. accumulated experience from the constant effort which has been OHIOSTATEUNIVERSITY . E. J. CRARE made in the office of Chemical Abstracts to keep the abstract COLU~WSUS, OHIO journal an example of good nomenclature justifies the statement ‘of a few preferences. The subject has been carefully studied, AN INTERNATIONAL SUGAR SCALE particularly by those who preceded the present editor and later Editor of the Journal of Industrial a,nd Engineering Chemistry: in connection with the Decennial Subject Index,’ and the advice As one whose regular work calls for frequent use of the polari,of those who seemed best able to help has often been sought. I believe that there will be no disagreement concerning the scope, I wish to express my approval of the proposition made by preferences stated below although frequent divergence from them C. A. Browneinyourissueof November I , that this is an opportune is observable. They are abridged from “Directions for Assistant time to adopt an international sugar scale and that the Sidersky Editors and Abstractors of Chemical Abstracts.” The nomencla- and Pellet scale based on a normal weight of 2 0 g. instead of the ture rules in these directions have come to be known, it seems, French and German scales now in use. The arguments ad.as representing the forms approved by the AMERICAN CHEMICAL vanced in favor of the proposed scale are convincingly stated SOCIETY, Requests for information as to the forms so ap- and certainly no more favorable time can arrive than the present critical time for the proposed change. proved a.re not infrequent. To make our list of nomenclature I would suggest that no time be lost in bringing the matter t o rules, perhaps after modification, more authoritative, or to formulate a new one and to settle points of disagreement (a the attention of polariscopists in Great Britain, Prance, and Italy. Would it not be an advantage to have every polariscope number of other preferences could be stated but the chances of disagreement would be greater with reference t o them), i t would equipped with both the angular scale and the sugar scale, with seem t o me that a revival of the Society’s dismissed Committee the outer edge of the vernier reading on one scale and the inner on Inorganic h’omenclature and its Committee on Organic No- edge fitted to read fractional parts on the other? The expense menclature would be opportune. Such a suggestion will be made. would not be serious. Now that many polariscopists are using as a standard light In naming a compound so as to indicate that oxygen is replaced by sulfur the prefix thio and not sulfo should be used filter a bichromate of potash filter in which the thickness in (sulfo denotes the group SOsH); thus HCNS, thiocyanic acid; centimeters multiplied by the percentage of crystals = g, we H ~ A s S thioarsenic ~, acid; NazSzOa,sodium thiosulfate; CS(NHZ)Z, have a standard of approximately monochromatic light which fhiourea. Note particularly that thiocyanate is preferable t o is more conveniently reproduced than the sodium flame, now sulfocyanide for salts of HCNS. The word hydrate should not be used for a kompound with that electric lights are in use everywhere. It should not be SOH;it is reserved for compounds with HzO. Thus, chlorine difficult to secure standard glass plates whose absorption as .hydrate, Clz.1oHp0; barium hydroxide, Ba(0H)z. filters would equal in every respect that of the bichromate filter. Salts of chloroplatinic acid are chloroplatinates (not platiniWith the new scale, the standard light filter, and the standard chlorides). Similarly salts of chlorauric acid are to be called quartz control plate adopted universally, international polarichloraurates. Hydroxyl derivatives of hydrocarbons are to be given names scopy would seem to have been placed on a very desirable footing. ending in -01, as resorcinol, pinacol (not pinacone), mannitol REGINA,CANADA W. W. ANDREWS (not mannite). There may be objection t o the form glycerol h’ovember 15, 1918 rather than glycerin because the latter is so well established. German names ending in it should be translated -ite rather than -it; as permutite. If it seems desirable to retain the origi- THE 1918 DIRECTORY-AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCLETY nal form of a trade name it should be placed in quotations, as The 1918 Diiectory of the AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY is “permutit.” Alcohols such as CaHs(0H)e (German Dulcit = now available for members. It contains 422 pages as compared dulcitol) are exceptio:;. The German ending -carbonsaure” should never be translated with the 1916 Directory’s 289 pages, and i t exceeds by ap“-carbonic acid.” proximately 4,000 the number of members listed in the 1916 It is desirable that in the case of organic compounds the connective o be used invariably in such names of substituent issue. The Directors have voted that i t may be obtained by radicals as amino-, bromo-, chloro-, cyano-, and iodo-; thus members from the Secretary on payment of $I .oo to cover bromobenzene, chloroacetic, nitroaniline. This conforms to the partial cost of printing and upon their written statement that demands of euphony and also makes for uniformity in indexing. it is desired for their personal use only and will not be loaned The use of this connective makes for better English; its omission is German-like. There are a few apparent exceptions to this or disposed of to any firm with which they may or may not be connected or to any individual t o be used for advertising purrule as cyanamide, chloraurate. The names of the groups NHz, NHR, NR2, NH, or NR should poses. end in -id0 only when they are substituents in an acid group, CHARLESI,. PARSONS WASHINGTON, D. C. otherwise in -;no; thus MeC( :NH)OEt, ethyl imidoacetate; December 10, 1918 NHzCHZCH~COZH, 0-aminopropionic acid (not amidopropionic acid) ; NHPhCH2CH2C02H, P-anilinopropionic acid; CHaC( :NH)COzH, a-iminopropionic acid. RAMSAY MEMORIAL FUND Hydroxy-, not oxy-, should be used in designating the hyOver $3,000 has been contributed t o the Ramsay Memorial droxyl group; as hydroxyacetic acid, CHz(0H)COsH, not oxyacetic acid. Keto- is to be preferred t o oxy- t o designate the group Fund in the United States up to date. The committee will be -CO-.. This is a case in which it is particularly bad t o follow glad to receive further American subscriptions. Checks should German practice. The term ether should never be used for compounds which be made payable and sent to the Ramsay Memorial Fund Committee, W. J. Matheson, Treasurer, z I Burling Slip, New York are properly called esters. City. 1 See Patterson and Curran, J . Am. Chem. Soc.. 39 (1917) ,1623-38.