1 / 11

Chapter 6 – Chemical Names & Formulas

Chapter 6 – Chemical Names & Formulas. 6.1 Introduction to Chemical Bonding 6.2 Representing Chemical Compounds 6.3 Ionic Charges 6.4 Ionic Compounds 6.5 Molecular Compounds & Acids 6.6 Summary of Naming and Formula Writing. 6.1 Introduction to Chemical Bonding.

grace
Download Presentation

Chapter 6 – Chemical Names & Formulas

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. Chapter 6 – Chemical Names & Formulas 6.1 Introduction to Chemical Bonding 6.2 Representing Chemical Compounds 6.3 Ionic Charges 6.4 Ionic Compounds 6.5 Molecular Compounds & Acids 6.6 Summary of Naming and Formula Writing

  2. 6.1 Introduction to Chemical Bonding • Molecules and Molecular Compounds • Molecule: the smallest electrically neutral part of a substance that has all of the same properties of that substance. • Molecules can be a variety of combinations of elements that may combine chemically to form molecular compounds. • As a general rule, molecules are usually two or more non-metallic elements joined together. • e.g., CO2 , C2H6O, ….

  3. 6.1 Introduction to Chemical Bonding (cont.) • Ions and Ionic Compounds • Not all compounds are molecular, many are ionic. • Ions are atoms or groups of atoms that are electrically charged. • Ionic compounds are generally formed from a metal and a non-metal.

  4. 6.1 Introduction to Chemical Bonding (cont.) • Ions and Ionic Compounds (cont.) • Ions can be either positive (cations) or negative (anions) • Cations go by the name of the element (Na+ becomes “sodium ion”) and with anions, the ending of the name changes to “-ide” (Cl1- becomes “chloride”). • As a general rule, anions form from non-metals and cations form from metals. • Use the periodic table for location and tendency of ion formation and/or an ion table. • Be able to compare and contrast similarities and differences between molecular and ionic compounds: Table 6.1 lists a few.

  5. 6.2 Representing Chemical Compounds • Chemical Formulas • “The kind and number of atoms in the smallest representative unit of the substance.” • Can be either a molecular formula (for molecules) or a formula unit (for ionic compounds)

  6. 6.2 Representing Chemical Compounds (cont.) • Laws of Definite and Multiple Proportions • In the simplest terms, masses of elements are always in the same proportions when combining into compounds and in ratios of small whole numbers (Dalton).

  7. 6.3 Ionic Charges • Monatomic Ions • Ions that consist of only 1 atom. • e.g. chloride – Cl-, hydrogen – H+, iodide – I- • Polyatomic Ions • Ions that are tightly bound groups consisting of two or more atoms, behave as a unit, and carry a charge. • e.g. acetate – C2H3O2-, ammonium – NH4+ • Use periodic table & Tables 6.2, 6.3, & 6.4

  8. Chapter 6 Assignment • CPQs # 1 pg. 166 # 45-49, 51-54

  9. 6.4 Ionic Compounds • Writing Formulas and Names for Ionic Compounds • Binary: compounds composed of two element ions. • e.g. BaCl2, NaCl, HCl, Fe2O3 • Some rules to consider: • Cations get written first • Net charge on compound must be zero • Criss-cross! Shoelace? • Naming Ionic Compounds • Work things in reverse! - Ternary Ionic Compounds • Same as before except you are using polyatomicanions! • e.g. Ca(NO3)2, Li2CO3, Mg(OH)2 • DO NOT ATTEMPT TO SPLIT UP POLYATOMIC ANIONS!

  10. 6.5 Molecular Compounds & Acids • Molecular Compounds • Easy to recognize: two non-metals! • Ending and prefixes are important here… • Table 6.5 • e.g. N2O, CO2, SF6 • Naming Common Acids • Memorize the list on page 160!

  11. Chapter 6 Assignment • CPQs # 1 pg. 166 # 45-49, 51-54 • CPQ’s #2 pp. 166-167 • #57,58,61,62,64,66

More Related