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Atoms, Molecules, and Ions Nomenclature

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1 Atoms, Molecules, and Ions Nomenclature
Chemistry review Atoms, Molecules, and Ions Nomenclature

2 Modern View The atom is mostly empty space. Two regions
Nucleus- protons and neutrons. Electron cloud- region where you might find an electron.

3 Sub-atomic Particles Z - atomic number = number of protons determines type of atom. A - mass number = number of protons + neutrons. Number of protons = number of electrons if neutral.

4 Symbols A X Z 23 Na 11

5 Chemical Bonds The forces that hold atoms together in molecules and polyatomic ions. Covalent bonding - sharing electrons. Chemical formula- the number and type of atoms in a molecule. C2H6 - 2 carbon atoms, 6 hydrogen atoms, Structural formula shows the connections, but not necessarily the shape.

6 H H H C C H H H There are also other model that attempt to show three dimensional shape.

7 Ions Atoms or groups of atoms with a charge.
Cations- positive ions - get by losing electrons(s). Anions- negative ions - get by gaining electron(s). Ionic bonding- held together by the opposite charges. Ionic solids are called salts.

8 Polyatomic Ions Groups of atoms that have a charge.
Yes, you have to memorize them. List in appendix C, page 801

9 Periodic Table

10 Metals Conductors Lose electrons Malleable and ductile

11 Nonmetals Brittle Gain electrons Covalent bonds

12 Semi-metals or Metalloids

13 Alkali Metals

14 Alkaline Earth Metals

15 Halogens

16 Transition metals

17 Noble Gases

18 Inner Transition Metals

19 +1 +2 -3 -2 -1

20 Writing Formulas for compounds
Two sets of rules Ionic Covalent If first element is a metal If the first element or a polyatomic ion is a non-metal

21 Ionic compounds If the cation is monoatomic- Name the metal (cation) just write the name. sodium ion, Na+ If the cation is polyatomic- name it. Ammonium, NH4+ If the anion is monoatomic- name it but change the ending to –ide. Chloride, Cl- If the anion is poly atomic- just name it Sulfate SO42-

22 Classical vs Stock methods
Ionic compounds What to do when the metal has more than one valence number? Classical vs Stock methods Classical uses original language to name metal Higher valence # uses “ic” suffix Eg: iron +3 is ferric Lower valence # uses “ous” suffix Eg: iron +2 is ferrous

23 Ionic compounds Stock method uses roman numerals to represent the valence # of the metal. Eg: iron (III) chloride or iron (II) chloride

24 Covalent compounds Two words, with prefixes. Prefixes tell you how many. mono, di, tri, tetra, penta, hexa, septa, nona, deca First element whole name with the appropriate prefix, except mono. Second element, -ide ending with appropriate prefix.

25 More Naming

26 Ionic Compounds Name these CaS K2S AlPO4 K2SO4 FeS CoI3

27 Ionic Compounds Name these CaS K2S AlPO4 K2SO4 FeS CoI3
calcium sulfide potassium sulfide aluminum phosphate potassium sulfate ferrous sulfide or iron (II) sulfide cobalt (III) iodide

28 Ionic Compounds Fe2(C2O4)3 MgO MnO KMnO4 NH4NO3 CuCl2 Cr2O3

29 Ionic Compounds Fe2(C2O4)3 MgO MnO KMnO4 NH4NO3 CuCl2 Cr2O3
iron (III) oxalate or ferric oxalate magnesium oxide manganese (II) oxide potassium permanganate ammonium nitrate copper (II) chloride or cupric chloride chromium (III) oxide

30 Ionic Compounds KClO4 NaClO3 YBO3 Cr(ClO)6

31 Ionic Compounds KClO4 NaClO3 YBO3 Cr(ClO)6 potassium perchlorate
sodium chlorate yttrium borate chromium (VI) hypochlorite

32 Ionic Compounds sodium sulfite calcium iodide lead (II) oxide
lead (IV) oxide mercury (I) sulfide barium chromate aluminum hydrogen sulfate cerium (IV) nitrite

33 Ionic Compounds sodium sulfite calcium iodide lead (II) oxide
lead (IV) oxide mercury (I) sulfide barium chromate aluminum hydrogen sulfate cerium (IV) nitrite Na2SO3 CaI2 PbO PbO2 Hg2S BaCrO4 Al(HSO4)3 Ce(NO2)4

34 Covalent compounds The name tells you how to write the formula
sulfur dioxide difluorine monoxide nitrogen trichloride diphosphorus pentoxide

35 Covalent compounds The name tells you how to write the formula
sulfur dioxide difluorine monoxide nitrogen trichloride diphosphorus pentoxide SO2 F2 O NCl3 P2 O5

36 Naming Covalent Compounds
CCl4 N2O4 XeF6 N4O4 P2O10

37 Naming Covalent Compounds
CCl4 N2O4 XeF6 N4O4 P2O10 carbon dioxide carbon monoxide carbon tetrachloride dinitrogen tetroxide xenon hexafluoride tetranitrogen tetroxide diphosphorus decoxide

38 More Names and formulas

39 Acids Substances that produce H+ ions when dissolved in water.
All acids begin with H. Two types of acids: Oxyacids Non-oxyacids

40 Naming oxyacids If the formula has oxygen in it
write the name of the anion, but change ate to -ic acid ite to -ous acid Eg: sulfate becomes sulfuric acid (H2SO4aq) and sulfite becomes sulfurous acid (H2SO3aq) H2CrO4 (aq) HMnO4 (aq) HNO2 (aq)

41 Naming oxyacids If the formula has oxygen in it
write the name of the anion, but change ate to -ic acid ite to -ous acid Eg: sulfate becomes sulfuric acid (H2SO4aq) and sulfite becomes sulfurous acid (H2SO3aq) H2CrO4 (aq) HMnO4 (aq) HNO2 (aq) chromic acid permanganic acid nitrous acid

42 Naming non-oxyacids If the acid doesn’t have oxygen
add the prefix hydro- change the suffix -ide to -ic acid HCl (aq) H2S (aq) HCN (aq)

43 Naming non-oxyacids If the acid doesn’t have oxygen
add the prefix hydro- change the suffix -ide to -ic acid HCl (aq) H2S (aq) HCN (aq) hydrochloric acid hydrosulfuric acid hydrocyanic acid

44 How to write formulas for acids
Backwards from names. If it has hydro- in the name it has no oxygen Anion ends in -ide No hydro, anion ends in -ate or -ite Write anion and add enough H to balance the charges.

45 Formulas for acids hydrofluoric acid dichromic acid carbonic acid
hydrophosphoric acid hypofluorous acid perchloric acid phosphorous acid HF (aq) H2Cr2 O7 (aq) H2CO3 (aq) H3P (aq) HFO (aq) HClO4 (aq) H3PO3 (aq)

46 Formulas for acids hydrofluoric acid dichromic acid carbonic acid
hydrophosphoric acid hypofluorous acid perchloric acid phosphorous acid

47 Hydrates Some salts trap water crystals when they form crystals.
These are hydrates. Both the name and the formula needs to indicate how many water molecules are trapped. In the name we add the word hydrate with a prefix that tells us how many water molecules.

48 Hydrates In the formula you put a dot and then write the number of molecules. calcium chloride dihydrate = CaCl2·2H2O chromium (III) nitrate hexahydrate = Cr(NO3)3· 6H2O


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