44
Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

  • Upload
    zubin

  • View
    55

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds. Ban Dihydrogen Monoxide!. Colorless, odorless, tasteless Kills uncounted thousands of people every year. Most deaths caused by accidental inhalation Prolonged exposure to its solid form causes severe tissue damage. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical

Compounds

Page 2: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Ban Dihydrogen Monoxide! Colorless, odorless, tasteless Kills uncounted thousands of people every year. Most deaths caused by accidental inhalation Prolonged exposure to its solid form causes severe

tissue damage. Symptoms of ingestion can include

excessive sweating and urination, a bloated feeling, nausea, vomiting body electrolyte imbalance.

For those who have become dependent, withdrawal means certain death.

Page 3: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Ban Dihydrogen Monoxide! Also known as hydroxl acid Major component of acid rain Contributes to the "greenhouse effect." May cause severe burns. Contributes to the erosion of our natural landscape. Accelerates corrosion and rusting of many metals. May cause electrical failures and decreased

effectiveness of automobile brakes. Been found in excised tumors of terminal cancer

patients. Is now an ingredient in most foods and beverages

Page 4: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Ban Dihydrogen Monoxide!Based on the evidence presented in the

previous two slides, do you support the banning of dihydrogen monoxide?

Write at least two sentences stating your reasoning.

Please sign the petition!

Page 5: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

What is Dihydrogen Monoxide?

Page 6: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Chemical Formulas Indicate the relative number of atoms or

ions of each kind in a chemical compound

C8H18

MgCl2

Ca(OH)2

8 C atoms 18 H atoms

2 OH- ions

2 Cl- ions

1 Ca2+ ion

1 Mg2+ ion

Page 7: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Monatomic Ions Ions formed from a single atomUsually have noble gas configurationsThat’s how we determine its chargeExample:

Li: 1s22s1

Li+: 1s2 or [He]Table on p.221 on monatomic ions

Page 8: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Naming Monatomic CationsUse the element’s name!Yes, it’s that simple!Example:

Cs+ = cesiumAl3+ = aluminum

Page 9: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Naming Monatomic AnionsDrop the ending of the element’s nameAdd the ending –ideExamples:

Cl- = chlorideN3- = nitride

Page 10: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Naming Monatomic IonsK+

S2-

Rb+

O2-

I-

Ba2+

Cu+

potassiumsulfiderubidiumoxide iodidebariumcopper

Page 11: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Binary Ionic CompoundsCompounds composed of two ionsTotal numbers of positive charges and

negative charges must be equalExamples:

NaClKBrCaF2

Page 12: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Writing Binary Ionic CompoundsWrite the symbols for the ions side by

side. Write the cation first.Al3+ O2-

Cross over the charges to use as the subscript for the other ion.

Al3+ O2-

Al2 O3

Page 13: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Writing Binary Ionic CompoundsCheck the subscripts and divide them to

give the smallest whole number ratio of ions.

Al2O3

Write the formula!Al2O3

Page 14: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Writing Binary Ionic CompoundsZinc iodideBarium fluorideLithium oxideCalcium oxideMagnesium bromide

ZnI2

BaF2

Li2OCaOMgBr2

Page 15: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Naming Binary Ionic Compounds

Give name of cation firstThen name the anionAl2O3

Name of cation: aluminumName of anion: oxideName of compound: aluminum oxide

Page 16: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Naming Binary Ionic Compounds

BaI2

ZnF2

K2OMgOCaBr2

Barium iodideZinc fluoridePotassium oxideMagnesium oxideCalcium bromide

Page 17: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Cations With Different ChargesSome elements form two or more cations

with different chargesFe2+ and Fe3+

Iron (II) and Iron (III)Naming compounds

FeO and Fe2O3

Iron (II) oxide and Iron (III) oxide

Page 18: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Name the Following Compounds

CuOCoF3

SnI4

FeS

Copper (II) oxideCobalt (III) fluorideTin (IV) iodide Iron (II) sulfide

Page 19: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Quiz- Name the Following Compounds

1. K2S2. AgBr3. Na2O4. FeCl25. BaS

6. Lithium fluoride7. Silver iodide8. Iron (III) oxide9. Magnesium iodide10. Gold chloride

Page 20: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Polyatomic Ions Ions that contain two or more atomsMost are negatively chargedList of polyatomic ions is on handout

**MEMORIZE THEM!!!**Examples:

CN- cyanideHCO3

- hydrogen carbonate (bicarbonate)NH4

+ ammonium

Page 21: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Polyatomic IonsYou will need to memorize the following:

Ammonium NH4+1

Acetate C2H3O2-1

Hydroxide OH-1

Nitrite NO2-1

Nitrate NO3-1

Bicarbonate HCO3-1

Carbonate CO3-2

Chromate CrO4-2

Sulfate SO4-2

Phosphate PO4-3

Page 22: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

OxyanionsPolyatomic ions that contain oxygenName depends on number of oxygen

atoms

Page 23: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Oxyanions (cont.) If two oxyanions-

Most oxygens: -ateLeast oxygens: -ite

ExampleNO3

- : nitrateNO2

- : nitrite

Page 24: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Oxyanions (cont.) If more than two oxyanions

Most oxygens: “Per- …. –ate” “-ate” “-ite” Least oxygens: “Hypo- …. –ite”

Example ClO4

- : perchlorate ClO3

- : chlorate ClO2

- : chlorite ClO- : hypochlorite

Page 25: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Polyatomic Ion Quiz

Sodium hypochloritePotassium sulfateMagnesium peroxideAmmonium chlorideLithium nitratePotassium phosphate

NaClOK2SO4

MgO2

NH4ClLiNO3

K3PO4

Page 26: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Polyatomic Ion Quiz1. Bicarbonate2. Acetate3. Bisulfite4. Permanganate5. Nitrite6. Cyanide7. Hydroxide8. Bisulfate9. Nitrate10. What’s your favorite polyatomic ion?

Page 27: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Binary Molecular CompoundsComposed of molecules (covalently

bonded!)A nonmetal bonded to another nonmetalExamples:

SO3

ICl3CH4

H2O

Page 28: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Prefixes for Naming Binary Molecular Compounds

1 mono- 2 di- 3 tri- 4 tetra- 5 penta- 6 hexa- 7 hepta- 8 octa- 9 nona- 10 deca

Page 29: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Naming Binary Molecular Compounds

Which element goes first? Smaller group number If same group- greater period number Use prefix only if there is more than one atom

Second element Prefix indicating number of atoms + root of the name

of the element + -ide General order of elements in binary compounds:

C, P, N, H, S, I, Br, Cl, O, F

Page 30: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Naming Binary Molecular Compounds

Examples:SO3 – sulfur trioxideBrCl3 – bromine trichloridePBr5 – phosphorus pentabromideN2O5 – dinitrogen pentoxide

Page 31: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Naming Binary Molecular Compounds

N2OCCl4NOCO2

N2O3

P4O10

Dinitrogen monoxideCarbon tetrachlorideNitrogen monoxideCarbon dioxideDinitrogen trioxideTetraphosphorus decoxide

Page 32: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Naming Binary Molecular Compounds- More Practice!

Disulfur dioxideSilicon tetrafluorideSulfur monoxidePhosphorus trioxideBoron trifluorideDiphosphorus pentoxide

S2O2 SiF4

SOPO3

BF3

P2O5

Page 33: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Acids Acid- a type of molecular compound

Two types Binary acids- made up of two elements- hydrogen, and one

of the halogens (F, Cl, Br, I) Oxyacids- contain hydrogen, oxygen, and a third element

Examples Binary acids:

HCl- hydrochloric acid; HF- hydrofluoric acid Oxyacids:

H2SO4: sulfuric acid HNO3: nitric acid

Page 34: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Formula MassThe sum of the atomic masses of all

atoms represented in its formulaUnits = amu (atomic mass units)Example: What is the formula mass of

water?2 H atoms @ 1.01 amu each = 2.02 amu1 O atom @ 16.00 amu each = 16.00 amuTotal mass of water = 16.00 + 2.02 = 18.02

Page 35: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Formula MassFind the formula mass of the following:

KClO3

H2SO4

Mg(NO3)2

C12H22O11

Page 36: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Molar MassThe mass in grams of one mole of a

substance If we have 1 mole of H2O, we have

2 moles of H atoms1 mole of O atoms

Page 37: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Molar Mass (cont.)How many moles of each atom are in the

following?CaCl2NaOHKMnO4

NH4OHMg(NO3)2

Page 38: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Molar Mass (cont.)Once we know the number of moles of

each atom, we can calculate the molar mass.

In H2O:2 moles H x 1.01 g H = 2.02 g H

1 mole H

1 mole O x 16.00 g O = 16.00 g O 1 mole O

Page 39: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Molar Mass (cont.)

Total mass of 1 mole H2O 2.02 g + 16.00 g = 18.02 g/mol

Page 40: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Molar Mass (cont.)Determine the molar mass of the following:

CaCl2NaOHKMnO4

NH4OHMg(NO3)2

Page 41: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Molar Mass as a Conversion Factor

Can use molar mass as a conversion factor to determine number of moles

How many moles of H2O are in 34.32 g?

Page 42: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Molar Mass as a Conversion Factor

How many molecules of NaCl can be found in a sample containing 45.43 g?

Page 43: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Molar Mass as a Conversion Factor

How many carbon atoms are in a 23.43 g sample of CO2?

Page 44: Chapter 7- Chemical Formulas and Chemical Compounds

Fun With Conversions! Ibuprofen, C13H18O2, is the active

ingredient in Advil. Find its molar massIf the tablets in the bottle contain a total of 33

g of ibuprofen, how many moles of ibuprofen are in the bottle?

How many molecules of ibuprofen are in the bottle?

What is the total mass in grams of carbon in 33 g of ibuprofen?