Talk:Isoprene
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Maybe a link explaining what those diagrams mean (I think I remember from high school chemistry, but not everyone did high school chemistry) would be good. --Robert Merkel
- If you are asking if we need a large article on chemical nomenclature, we probably do. However that kind of article could reach the size of a small book in no time flat. Most people learn nomenclature as they go because there is too much of it to swallow at once. Someone wanting to track down what those "diagrams mean" might fruitfully be pointed to a pre-college introduction to the subject of organic chemistry. Isaac Asimov, if I recall correctly, has a book covering that kind of thing. Again, that's a huge topic and outside the scope of my interests.
In short, however, the diagram uses a kind of organic chemistry shorthand. The lines represent carbon-carbon bonds, double lines represent double bonds, and the vertices are tetravalent carbon atoms binding covalently. If, by counting, there are fewer than 4 bonds to carbon, you have to assume that there is a carbon-hydrogen linkage (i.e. a C-H bond ). Dwmyers 18:55, 18 Sep 2003 (UTC)
[edit] Confusing
'About 95% of isoprene production is used to produce cis-1,4-polyisoprene - a synthetic version of natural rubber.
Natural rubber is a polymer of isoprene - most often cis-1,4-polyisoprene...
Unclear. Isn't second 'cis-1,4-polyisoprene' misplaced?
NantucketNoon 15:06, 7 August 2007 (UTC)

