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Nomenclature, Ch. 9. Create a graphic organizer that helps you name compounds. You may use this on the test. Naming Monatomic Ions Monatomic ions are made of one atom. If the ion is positive, it is easy to name. Mg 2+ Magnesium ion. If the ion is negative, replace ending with ide .
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Create a graphic organizer that helps you name compounds. You may use this on the test.
Naming Monatomic Ions • Monatomic ions are made of one atom. • If the ion is positive, it is easy to name. • Mg2+ Magnesium ion
If the ion is negative, replace ending with ide. • Br- Bromide P3- Phosphide
Transition Metal ions • The transition metals form ions with different charges, so you must specify its charge. • Cu+ Copper(I) ion • Cu2+ Copper(II) ion • Cu3+ Copper(III) ion
Naming Polyatomic Ions • Polyatomic ions are made of more than one atom put together. • They usually end in ite or ate. Ite means one less oxygen atom than ate.
SO32- Sulfite • SO42- Sulfate
H+ can combine with Polyatomic ions to create ions with a different charge than before. • CO32- Carbonate • HCO3- Hydrogen Carbonate • H2CO3 Dihydrogen Carbonate
Binary Ionic Compounds • Ionic Compounds that contain two different types of atoms. • NaF • MgCl2
Writing a chemical formula • Exp, Al reacts with S.
Naming Binary Ionic: • Mg3P2 • SnS2 • SnF2 • CuS
Ionic Compounds Containing Polyatomic Ions • Write formula and name: • Mg2+ reacting with NO3- • Mg2+ reacting with PO43-
Create a graphic organizer that helps you name compounds. You may use this on the test.
Naming Binary Covalent (aka Molecular) Compounds • How do you tell if something is Covalent? • It does NOT have any metals. If it has any metal atom in it, it is ionic.
When you name Covalent compounds, you need to put prefixes in front of each element. EXCEPT: If the first element has one element. • Use ide as an ending for the second element.
Name the following: CO Cl2O8 AsCl5 P4O6
Naming and Writing Formulas for Acids and Bases: • Acids Release H+ ions • Bases Absorb H+ ions
Rules for naming acids with the general formula HaX: • 1. When the name of the anion (X) ends in ide, the acid name begins with the prefix hydro. The stem of the anion has the suffix ic and is followed by the word acid. H2S = Hydrosulfuric acid. • 2. When the name of the anion ends in ite, the acid name is the stem of the anion with the suffix ous, followed by the word acid. H2SO3 = sulfurous acid • 3. When the anion name ends in ate, the acid name is the stem of the anion with the suffix ic followed by the word acid. HNO3 = Nitric acid
H3PO4 • Phosphoric acid • HBr • Hydrobromic acid • H3PO3 • Phophorous acid
How to get from name of acid to the formula: Use the 3 rules carefully to go backwards. Exp: Phosporic Acid
Hints: • Ionic Compounds Have a metal • Covalent Compounds NO metal • Acids Almost always Has an H (or more) at the front (like HBr) • Bases Have OH (almost always)
Law of Definite Proportions • In a given compound, the ratio of the masses of the elements will always be the same. • H2O In a 18 gram sample, will have 2 grams of H and 16 grams of O. • OH Will have 16 grams of O for every 1 gram of H
Create a graphic organizer that helps you name compounds. You may use this on the test.
How crayons are made: • http://videos.howstuffworks.com/science-channel/32735-how-its-made-crayons-video.htm