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Published byJanel Wade Modified over 9 years ago
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Topic: Naming Ionic Compounds Do Now: Write formulas for the following 1. Na and Cl 2. Mg and I 3. Al and S Na +1 Cl -1 = NaCl Mg +2 I -1 = MgI 2 Al +3 S -2 = Al 2 S 3
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Naming Binary Ionic Compounds there is a flow chart for you to use add to your reference table packet 1. Always name metal (the cation/+ ion) first 2. Leave a space stem 3. Write stem of nonmetal (the anion/ - ion) and Add ending “ide” to nonmetal Binary = only 2 types of elements (two capital letters)
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Stems of nonmetals Iod Brom Chlor Fluor Hydr is the stem for H Tellur SelenArsen SulfPhosph OxNitr
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Metals with one oxidation state CaO BaS AlN LiCl Al 2 Se 3 Na 2 O K 3 N MgF 2 Calcium Oxide Barium Sulfide Aluminum Nitride Lithium Chloride Aluminum Selenide Sodium Oxide Potassium Nitride Magnesium Fluoride
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The First Step in Naming Find metal on PT If metal has only one oxidation state it’s easy If metal has more than one oxidation state, there’s an extra step
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Metals with more than 1 oxidation state Use formula to figure out which oxidation state metal ion hasUse formula to figure out which oxidation state metal ion has orEx: Fe can be Fe +2 or Fe +3 »FeO vs Fe 2 O 3 – two different – two different compounds so cannot both be called iron oxide or –so we have to use Roman Numeral to Tell which Fe (Fe +2 or Fe +3 ) we are using – Iron (II) Oxide –uses Fe +2 – Irons (III) Oxide – use Fe +3
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When deterring Oxidation State of Metal being used, assigned the nonmetal it’s oxidation number first (will be the top oxidation number from the PT)
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FeO Compounds are electrically neutral Oxygen is -2 FeO Name: Iron (II) oxide but means Iron (+2) Oxide (roman numeral II = charge on Fe is +2) 1 O which is -2 so Fe must be +2 so Fe must be +2
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FeO and Fe 2 O 3 Fe 2 O 3 Each O is -2 There are 3 O’s 3 X (-2) = -6 Total negative charge Total positive charge must be +6 Each Fe is +3 Name: Iron (III) oxide but means Iron (+3) Oxide (roman numeral III = charge on Fe is +3)
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Name the following TiCl 3 MnO 2 Co 2 O 3 PdBr 2 AuCl 3 MoN MnO TiO Titanium (III) chloride Manganese (IV) oxide Cobalt (III) oxide Palladium (II) bromide Gold (III) chloride Molybdenum (III) nitride Manganese (II) oxide Titanium (II) oxide
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Summary for Binary Ionic Compounds Compounds are electrically neutral Formula: positive first If metal has more than 1 oxidation state, name has roman numeral (MOST ALL TRANSITION METALS need this) Name = metal + stem of nonmetal + ide
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Some ionic compounds have a polyatomic ion – see table E EXAMPLE KOH - K = metal (positive ion) and OH = polyatomic ion (negative ion) MgSO 4 – Mg = metal (positive ion) and SO 4 = polyatomic ion (negative ion)
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Naming compounds with polyatomics polyatomic ions have names (Table E) naming is parallel to binary naming positive always written first if (+)’ve ion is a metal, check to see how many oxidation states it has –if > 1 then name must have roman numeral if (–)’ve is polyatomic - 2 nd part of name is name of polyatomic (don’t modify ending)
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Name the following NaOHNaOH KHCO 3KHCO 3 LiNO 3LiNO 3 CaSO 4CaSO 4 Al(NO 3 ) 3Al(NO 3 ) 3 Fe(OH) 2Fe(OH) 2 CuSO 4CuSO 4 CuSCNCuSCN Sodium hydroxide Potassium hydrogen carbonate Lithium nitrate Calcium sulfate Aluminum nitrate Iron (II) hydroxide Copper (II) sulfate Copper (I) thiocyanate
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