The
inductive effect has universally been represented by the symbol
. This is now commonly taken to include both through-bonds and through-space
transmission, but
is also used specifically for through-bonds
transmission; through-space
transmission is then symbolized as
(for
field effect). The symbols for the influence of substituents exerted through electron
delocalization have variously been
(
mesomeric),
(
electromeric),
(tautomeric),
(conjugative), K (konjugativ) and
(
resonance). Since the present fashion is to use the term
resonance effect,
is the most commonly used symbol, although
is still seen quite often. Both the possible sign conventions are in use. The Ingold
sign convention associates
electronegativity (relative to hydrogen atom) with a negative sign, electropositivity with a positive
sign. Thus the nitro group is described as electronwithdrawing by virtue of its
and
effects; chloro is described as a
,
substituent, etc. For
correlation analysis and
linear free-energy relationships this convention has been found inconvenient, for it is in contradiction to the sign
convention for polar substituent constants (σ-constants). Authors concerned with these
fields often avoid this contradiction by adopting the opposite sign convention originally
associated with Robinson, for electronic effects. This practice is almost always associated
with the use of R for the electron
delocalization effect: thus the nitro group is a
,
substituent; chloro a
,
substituent, etc.
Source:
PAC, 1994, 66, 1077
(Glossary of terms used in physical organic chemistry (IUPAC Recommendations 1994))
on page 1111