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Writing Chemical Names and Formulas: A Review

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William Shakespeare. Romeo & Juliet. What's in a name? ... The system for naming an ionic compound is different from that for naming a ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Writing Chemical Names and Formulas: A Review


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Whats in a name? That which we call a rose, by
any other name, would smell as sweet.
William Shakespeare Romeo Juliet
3
Naming Chemical Compounds
Ionic Compounds
Covalent Compounds
4
Classifying Compounds
The system for naming an ionic compound is
different from that for naming a covalent
compound, so before a compound can be named, it
must be classified as ionic or covalent.
Heres a simple test
Is there a metal present?
  • If the answer is yes, use the system for naming
    ionic compounds.
  • If the answer is no, use the system for naming
    covalent compounds.

5
Naming Ionic Compounds
  • Name the two elements
  • Change the second one so that it ends in -ide
  • LikeChloride, Sulfide, Oxide, Bromide,
    Phosphide, etc.

6
Examples
  • MgCl2
  • NaF
  • AlI3
  • CaO
  • Zn3P2
  • GaN
  • Magnesium Chloride
  • Sodium Flouride
  • Aluminum Iodide
  • Calcium Oxide
  • Zinc Phosphide
  • Gallium Nitride

7
Unfortunately
Its never quite that simple
Some metals form more than one ion.
  • Add a Roman numeral to the name to indicate the
    charge
  • Fe2 is called iron (II) and
  • Fe3 is called iron (III)
  • Assume a Roman numeral is required for any metal
    except
  • metals in groups 1 and 2 on the periodic table
  • aluminum, cadmium, silver, and zinc

8
Duplicitous Metals
  • Common metals that make more than 1 ion

9
The Tricky Bits
  • The tricky part is figuring out which ion charge
    the metal is using.
  • Use the non-metal to figure this out.
  • oxygen is 2-
  • 2 of them is 4-
  • so one Pb must be 4
  • lead (IV) oxide

PbO2
Total charge must be zero
10
Polyatomic Ions
  • Sometimes the metal is not with a non-metal
  • There are other negative ions
  • They are composed of many non-metals bonded
    together
  • The collection has an overall negative charge
  • There are lots of these but a few are very common
  • Heres a brief list of the most common

11
Common Combined Ions
12
Naming with PAI
  • Put the two names together with no changes
  • Remember the part about metals with more than one
    charge

13
Naming Covalent Compounds
  • Put the two names together
  • Change the second one to end in ide
  • Attach greek prefixes to show how many

14
Naming Covalent Compounds
Prefixes
Often not used on first element (but not wrong
either)
When a prefix is added to oxide, the o or a is
often dropped like pentoxide or nonoxide
15
Some Examples
N2S4
dinitrogen tetrasulfide
NI3
nitrogen triiodide
XeF6
xenon hexafluoride
P4O10
tetraphosphorous decoxide
P2O5
diphosphorus pentoxide
IF7
Iodine heptafluoride
16
A Little Review/Practice
Na2CO3
sodium carbonate
NH4Cl
ammonium chloride
metal present ? ionic ? no prefixes Na ? group I
? no Roman numeral
NH4 ? polyatomic ion present ? ionic ? no
prefixes
N2O
dinitrogen monoxide
CoI3
cobalt (III) iodide
two nonmetals ? covalent ? use prefixes
metal present ? ionic ? no prefixes Co ? not
group I, II, etc. ? add Roman numeral (I is 1-,
total is 3-, Co must be 3)
K2O
potassium oxide
PI3
phosphorus triiodide
metal present ? ionic ? no prefixes K ? group I
? no Roman numeral
two nonmetals ? covalent ? use prefixes
SiF4
silicon tetrafluoride
Cu3PO4
copper (I) phosphate
two nonmetals ? covalent ? use prefixes
metal present ? ionic ? no prefixes Cu ? not
group I, II, etc. ? add Roman numeral (PO4 is 3-,
each Cu must be 1)
17
You are now an expert at
  • Chemical
  • Nomenclature
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