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Ionic Bonding (Part 3) The Last Step: Adding Polyatomic Ions.

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Presentation on theme: "Ionic Bonding (Part 3) The Last Step: Adding Polyatomic Ions."— Presentation transcript:

1 Ionic Bonding (Part 3) The Last Step: Adding Polyatomic Ions

2 To this Point, All Ions Have Been Monatomic Monatomic ions are ions that are formed from a single atom (the prefix mono- means one). Polyatomic ions are ions that consist of two or more atoms bonded together by covalent bonds (the prefix poly- means more than one). The combination of several atoms in a polyatomic ion has an overall charge that is either positive or negative. That, of course, makes it an ion. Even with polyatomic ions, a positive ion is called a cation and a negative ion is called an anion. As before, in an ionic compound, the total charge of the cations must be in perfect balance with the total charge of the anions.

3 The Monatomic Ions Table is Still Used Oxidation Numbers of Monatomic Ions 1+2+3+4+ cesium, Cs + copper (I), Cu + gold (I), Au + hydrogen, H + lithium, Li + potassium, K + silver, Ag + sodium, Na + barium, Ba 2+ beryllium, Be 2+ cadmium, Cd 2+ calcium, Ca 2+ cobalt (II), Co 2+ copper (II), Cu 2+ iron (II), Fe 2+ chromium (II), Cr 2+ lead (II), Pb 2+ magnesium, Mg 2+ mercury (II), Hg 2+ nickel (II), Ni 2+ platinum (II), Pt 2+ tin (II), Sn 2+ zinc, Zn 2+ manganese (II), Mn 2+ aluminum, Al 3+ bismuth (III), Bi 3+ boron, B 3+ cobalt (III), Co 3+ gold (III), Au 3+ iron (III), Fe 3+ antimony (III), Sb 3+ chromium (III), Cr 3+ lead (IV), Pb 4+ platinum (IV), Pt 4+ silicon, Si 4+ tin (IV), Sn 4+ titanium (IV), Ti 4+ 5+ niobium (V), Nb 5+ vanadium (V), V 5+ 1-2-3-4- bromide, Br - chloride, Cl - fluoride, F - iodide, I - oxide, O 2- sulfide, S 2- nitride, N 3- phosphide, P 3- carbide, C 4-

4 But, this Part with Polyatomic Ions is Added Charges of Common Polyatomic Ions 1+1-2-3- ammonium, NH 4 + acetate, CH 3 COO - azide, N 3 - bromate, BrO 3 - chlorate, ClO 3 - cyanide, CN - formate, HCOO - bicarbonate, HCO 3 - hydroxide, OH - hypochlorite, ClO - iodate, IO 3 - nitrate, NO 3 - nitrite, NO 2 - perchlorate, ClO 4 - periodate, IO 4 - carbonate, CO 3 2- chromate, CrO 4 2- dichromate, Cr 2 O 7 2- sulfate, SO 4 2- sulfite, SO 3 2- tetraborate, B 4 O 7 2- thiosulfate, S 2 O 3 2- phosphate, PO 4 3-

5 The Only Thing Different About Polyatomic Ions is that in Formulas They Must be Handled Specially A polyatomic ion is a fixed unit—it cannot be built onto or subtracted from. For example, SO 4 2- cannot suddenly change to SO 3 2-. In formulas, multiples of polyatomic ions are treated with parentheses and a subscript outside the parentheses. Thus, aluminum sulfate is Al 2 (SO 4 ) 3. A single polyatomic ion does not need parentheses. So, barium sulfate is BaSO 4.

6 Writing Formulas and Naming Compounds Follow the Same Logic as Before Barium phosphate Calcium carbonate Ammonium sulfide Lead (II) chromate Ba 3 (PO 4 ) 2 CaCO 3 (NH 4 ) 2 S PbCrO 4 The polyatomic cation (ammonium) and anions have special names that must be found in the “Charges of Common Polyatomic Ions” table.

7 The Counting of Atoms is More Complicated for Ionic Compounds Containing Polyatomic Ions As before the subscript applies to the species at its immediate left only If that is a parenthetical unit, each element within the parentheses gets multiplied by the subscript outside the parentheses. Let’s review the simple ones with which you have worked before.

8 For Simple Compounds, the Subscript Applies to Only One Element Sodium Chloride, NaCl Barium Sulfide, BaS Sodium Phosphide, Na 3 P Iron (III) Oxide, Fe 2 O 3 Titanium (IV) Phosphide, Ti 3 P 4 Lead (IV) Fluoride, PbF 4 1 Na and 1 Cl 1 Ba and 1 S 3 Na and 1 P 2 Fe and 3 O 3 Ti and 4 P 1 Pb and 4 F

9 For IC’s with Polyatomic Ions, Each Element in the Parentheses is Multiplied by the Outside Subscript: This is a lot like algebra! Sodium phosphate, Na 3 (PO 4 ) 3 Ammonium carbonate, (NH 4 ) 2 CO 3 Aluminum dichromate, Al 2 (Cr 2 O 7 ) 3 Silicon formate, Si(HCOO) 4 Bismuth azide, Bi(N 3 ) 3 Chromium (III) sulfate, Cr 2 (SO 4 ) 3 Gold (III) Perchlorate, Au(ClO 4 ) 3 3 Na, 3 P, 12 O 2 N, 8 H, 1 C, 3 O 2 Al, 6 Cr, 21 O 1 Si, 4 H, 4 C, 8 O 1 Bi and 9 N 2 Cr, 3 S, 12 O 1 Au, 3 Cl, 12 O

10 Count the number of elements from each formula: Barium phosphate Calcium carbonate Ammonium sulfide Lead (II) chromate Ba 3 (PO 4 ) 2 CaCO 3 (NH 4 ) 2 S PbCrO 4


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