1 / 32

Rules For Writing Chemical Formulas and Naming Compounds-Ionic

Rules For Writing Chemical Formulas and Naming Compounds-Ionic. Binary Ionic Compounds. Binary compound - made of two elements Oxidation number – tells you how many electrons an atom loses or gains to form an ionic compound; positive or negative; (become stable)

darleneg
Download Presentation

Rules For Writing Chemical Formulas and Naming Compounds-Ionic

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Rules For Writing Chemical Formulas and Naming Compounds-Ionic

  2. Binary Ionic Compounds • Binary compound - made of two elements • Oxidation number – tells you how many electrons an atom loses or gains to form an ionic compound; positive or negative; (become stable) • Some metals can have more than one oxidation number

  3. Naming Binary Ionic Compounds: • 1. Cation first, then anion • 2. Cation = name of the element • Ca2+ = calciumion • 3. Anion = root + -ide • Cl- = chloride • CaCl2 = calcium chloride

  4. Naming Binary Ionic Compounds • Examples: NaCl ZnI2 Al2O3 sodium chloride zinc iodide aluminum oxide

  5. Learning Check Complete the names of the following binary compounds: Na3N _____________ KBr _____________ Al2O3 _____________ MgS _____________

  6. Learning Check Complete the names of the following binary compounds: Na3N _Sodium Nitride____________ KBr _Potassium Bromide_______ Al2O3 _Aluminium Oxide______ MgS _Magnesium Sulfide_______

  7. Transition Metals • Elements that can have more than one possible charge MUST have a Roman Numeral to indicate the charge on the individual ion.

  8. 1+ or 2+ 2+ or 3+ Cu+,Cu2+ Fe2+, Fe3+ copper(I) ion iron(II) ion copper (II) ion iron(III) ion

  9. Examples FeCl3 (Fe3+) iron (III) chloride CuCl (Cu+ ) copper (I) chloride SnF4 (Sn4+) tin (IV) fluoride PbCl2 (Pb2+) lead (II) chloride Fe2S3 (Fe3+) iron (III) sulfide

  10. Learning Check Complete the names of the following binary compounds with variable metal ions: FeBr2 +2 iron (_____) bromide CuCl +1 copper (_____) chloride SnO2 +2 ___(_____ ) ______________ Fe2O3 +3 ________________________ Hg2S +1 ________________________

  11. Learning Check Complete the names of the following binary compounds with variable metal ions: FeBr2 +2 iron (__II___) bromide CuCl +1 copper (__I___) chloride SnO2 +2 _Tin__(__II___ ) _Oxide___ Fe2O3 +3 _Iron (III) Oxide_____ Hg2S +1 __Mercury (I) Sulfide______

  12. Writing Formulas • 1.Write the symbol of the element or polyatomic ion (ions containing more than one atom) that has the positive oxidation number. Hydrogen and ammonium (NH4) and all metals are positive.

  13. Writing Formulas • 2. Write the symbol of the element or polyatomic ion with the negative oxidation number. Nonmetals other than hydrogen and polyatomic ions other than NH4 are positive. • 3. Use subscripts next to each ion so that the total charge of all ions is zero.

  14. ex. Na+ (sodium ion) and Cl- (chloride ion) Na+ Cl- Na1Cl1 NaCl ex. Ca2+ (calcium ion) and O2- (oxide ion) Ca2+ O2- Ca2O2 CaO (divide both by two to simplify) Short-cut method: CrissCross • This method ‘criss-crosses’ the ion charges to the subscript position • IF you use criss-cross, be careful to simplify the formula keeping whole numbers! 1 1

  15. Rules for using oxidation numbers to create compounds Positive ions can only bond with negative ions and vice versa 2. The sum of the oxidation numbers of the atoms in a compound must be zero (the key is to stay balanced) 3. If the oxidation numbers are not equal to zero, then you must add additional elements until they balance at zero. 4. When writing a formula the symbol of the Positive (+) element is followed by the symbol of the negative (-) element.

  16. Group 1 is + 1 Group 2 is +2 Group 13 is +3 Group 14 is +4 Group 15 is -3 Group 16 is -2 Group 17 is -1 Group 18 is 0 Compounds are neutralFor every positive, there must be a negative

  17. Learning Check What is the correct formula for the compounds containing the following ions: 1. Na+, S2- a) NaS b) Na2S c) NaS2 2. Al3+, Cl- a) AlCl3 b) AlCl c) Al3Cl 3. Mg2+, N3- a) MgN b) Mg2N3 c) Mg3N2

  18. Solution 1. Na+, S2- b) Na2S 2. Al3+, Cl- a) AlCl3 3. Mg2+, N3- c) Mg3N2

  19. Polyatomic Ions NO3- nitrate ion NO2- nitrite ion

  20. Polyatomic Compounds Some compounds like calcium carbonate and copper (II) sulphate do not end in “ide” like other ionic compounds. Why? Such compounds are pure substances that involve a metal ion and a polyatomic or complex ion. Polyatomic ions are groups of atoms that tend to stay together and carry an overall charge. E.g. sulphate ion is SO4-2 Free Template from www.brainybetty.com

  21. Free Template from www.brainybetty.com

  22. DO NOT have to write but take a look!

  23. Writing Formulas for Polyatomic Compounds What is the formula for copper (II) sulphate 1)write the symbols for the metal and the polyatomic group Cu SO4 Free Template from www.brainybetty.com

  24. 2)     write the ionic charges +2 -2 Cu SO4 Free Template from www.brainybetty.com

  25. 3) Criss Cross and reduce the subscripts to their simplest terms if possible. (Brackets) may be needed if there is 2 or more polyatomic ions. Never change the subscript of the polyatomic group. Cu2 SO42 = Cu2 (SO4)2 = Cu SO4 Free Template from www.brainybetty.com

  26. Naming Polyatomic Compounds The name of the above compound is Copper (II) Sulphate The name is simply the name of the metal (use a roman numeral if the metal has more than 1 positive charge) and the name of the polyatomic ion . Both can be found on the periodic table by looking them up. Free Template from www.brainybetty.com

  27. Writing Formulas: Polyatomic • Write each ion, cation first. Don’t show charges in the final formula. • Overall charge must equal zero. • If charges cancel, just write symbols. • If not, use subscripts to balance charges. • Use parentheses to show more than one of a particular polyatomic ion. • Use Roman numerals indicate the ion’s charge when needed

  28. Examples Sodium Sulfate Na+ and SO4-2 Na2SO4 Iron (III) hydroxide Fe+3 and OH- Fe(OH)3 Ammonium carbonate NH4+ and CO3–2 (NH4)2CO3

  29. Learning Check 1. Aluminum (III) nitrate a) AlNO3 b) Al(NO)3 c) Al(NO3)3 2. copper(II) nitrate a) CuNO3 b) Cu(NO3)2 c)Cu2(NO3) 3. Iron (III) hydroxide a) FeOH b) Fe3OH c) Fe(OH)3 4. Tin(IV) hydroxide a) Sn(OH)4 b) Sn(OH)2 c)Sn4(OH)

  30. Learning Check Match each set with the correct name: 1.Na2CO3a) magnesium sulfite MgSO3b) magnesium sulfate MgSO4c) sodium carbonate 2 . Ca(HCO3)2a) calcium carbonate CaCO3b) calcium phosphate Ca3(PO4)2 c) calcium bicarbonate

  31. Mixed Practice! Name the following: • Na2O • CaCO3 • PbS2 • Sn3N2 • Cu3PO4 • HgF2

  32. Mixed Up… The Other Way Write the formula: • Calcium nitride • Aluminum (III) carbonate • Potassium bromide • Barium fluoride • Cesium hydroxide

More Related