See image — IUPAC and Nomenclature Chemistry Question
Question
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💡 Solution & Explanation
Step 1 - Identify the reaction context: Question 60 presents 4-oxopentanal (the starting material shown at top) and asks the student to identify it by IUPAC name or to relate it to the product shown below via an aldol or similar reaction. Step 2 - Analyze the top structure: The structure drawn at the top shows a linear chain: CHO (aldehyde at one end) connected by two CH2 groups to a C=O (ketone) connected to CH3. This gives the sequence: OHC-CH2-CH2-CO-CH3, which is a 5-carbon compound. Step 3 - Apply IUPAC nomenclature: The longest chain containing both carbonyl groups has 5 carbons. Numbering from the aldehyde end (aldehyde gets lowest locant): C1=CHO, C2=CH2, C3=CH2, C4=C=O, C5=CH3. The compound is a pentanal (5-carbon aldehyde) with a keto group at position 4, giving the name 4-oxopentanal. Step 4 - Confirm: 4-oxopentanal has molecular formula C5H8O2, consistent with the drawn structure OHC-CH2-CH2-CO-CH3. The 'oxo' prefix designates the ketone carbonyl at C4, and 'pentanal' designates the 5-carbon chain with terminal aldehyde. Step 5 - The lower structure appears to be a product of an intramolecular or intermolecular aldol condensation or Reformatsky-type reaction of 4-oxopentanal with cyclopropane-containing reagents, confirming the identity of the starting material as 4-oxopentanal. Therefore, the correct answer is 4-oxopentanal.