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Ionic Compounds and Naming Chapter 4.10,4.11 and 5

Ionic Compounds and Naming

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Ionic Compounds and Naming. Chapter 4.10,4.11 and 5. When we begin combining elements we make compounds. Two types Non-metal and metal Non-metal and non-metal Each type has unique physical and chemical properties Look at non-metal and metal in detail now and non-metal and non-metal later. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Ionic Compounds and Naming

Ionic Compounds and Naming

Chapter 4.10,4.11 and 5

Page 2: Ionic Compounds and Naming

Combining Elements

When we begin combining elements we make compounds.

Two types◦Non-metal and metal◦Non-metal and non-metal

Each type has unique physical and chemical properties

Look at non-metal and metal in detail now and non-metal and non-metal later

Page 3: Ionic Compounds and Naming
Page 4: Ionic Compounds and Naming

Ionic compounds

A metal and a non-metal combination make an ionic compound◦Each element or polyatomic group is an ion◦What makes an ion?

An ion is a charged particle (positive or negative) Difference between protons and electrons in an

element◦Ca vs Ca+2 (Ca+2 has 2 less electrons than Ca)

Page 5: Ionic Compounds and Naming

The number of valence electrons determines the type of ion formed◦Trying to reach noble gas state

Lose or gain electrons to reach magic number 8◦Valence electrons are known by group number

Main group elements only These atoms follow a pattern down the column

Page 6: Ionic Compounds and Naming

Valence electrons vs charge

Page 7: Ionic Compounds and Naming

Practice

How many valence electrons do the following elements have?

What would their charge be?

◦K Mg Al C◦P O Br Ar

◦Do you see any pattern to the charges? Metals make positive ions (cations) Non-metals make negative electrons (anions)

Page 8: Ionic Compounds and Naming

Ionic Equations

We can write ions as ionic equations

K+1 can be written as K → K+1 + 1e-N-3 can be written as N + 3e- → N-3

Try these:◦Mg and O

Page 9: Ionic Compounds and Naming

Making ionic compounds

All ionic compounds are overall neutral; that is when you add up all the charges the sum is zero

NaCl is made with Na+1 and Cl-1MgO is made with Mg+2 and O-2

Na2O is made with 2 Na+1 and O-2

MgCl2 is made with Mg+2 and 2 Cl-1

Page 10: Ionic Compounds and Naming

Practice

Put the following elements together to make ionic compounds

Be and FLi and SBa and NK and AsCs and C

Page 11: Ionic Compounds and Naming

Transition metals

What about the elements in-between group II and III?◦Called transition metals because they can

make more than one positive charge◦On our tables you can tell by the small black

number above the symbol…..

Page 12: Ionic Compounds and Naming

Practice with transition metals

Cu II and SW IV and OPd II and NCr III and Si

Page 13: Ionic Compounds and Naming

Polyatomic Ions

Some ions are actually a group of elements combined together◦Can not be broken apart◦Act as one unit

These are known as polyatomic ions

◦See handout

Page 14: Ionic Compounds and Naming

Naming Binary Compounds

Page 15: Ionic Compounds and Naming

Naming Binary Compounds

We can easily name binary compounds both ionic and covalent (non-metals)

◦Non-metals and metals use type I and II

◦Non-metals and non-metals use type III

Page 16: Ionic Compounds and Naming

Naming Binary Ionic Compounds

Type I◦Metal bonded to non-metal◦Metal always listed and named first

No changes in the metal name◦Metals only make ONE ion (known as simple

metals)◦Anion is listed second

Use the root of the name and add –ide◦Hydrogen becomes hydride◦Halogens remove –ine and add –ide◦Oxide, nitride, sulfide

◦ NaCl is sodium chloride

Page 17: Ionic Compounds and Naming

Type II◦use transition metals

Cation is first again and anion is changed the same as type I

The difference is that we need to designate the charge of the transition metal with a Roman Number

USE THE ANION TO DETERMINE THE CHARGE OF THE CATION!!!

CuO◦Oxygen is -2◦The compound must be neutral◦So the copper (Cu) must be +2◦The compound is named copper II oxide

Page 18: Ionic Compounds and Naming

Practice

Name the following ionic compounds:

CaF AlCl3 MgI2

CuBr2 Al2O3 CrCl3

Fe2O3 FeO FeCl3

The number of atoms has no influence on the name for type I and II

Page 19: Ionic Compounds and Naming

Polyatomic Ions

Polyatomic ions just use their name

K2SO4 would be potassium sulfate

NH4NO3 would be ammonium nitrate

Co(NO2)2

(NH4)3N

Page 20: Ionic Compounds and Naming

Type III◦Non-metal to non-metals

NUMBER OF ATOMS IS IMPORTANT FOR TYPE III

Use prefixes to determine the number of atoms in the name

Same naming scheme as type I Use entire name for 1st element -ide for 2nd Add prefixes for multiple atoms

◦Note: mono- is never used on 1st element

Page 21: Ionic Compounds and Naming

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

Page 22: Ionic Compounds and Naming

Practice

CCl4 would be carbon tetrachlorideN2O2 would be dinitrogen dioxide

PCl5 P4O6

N2O5 SF6

CO NO2

Page 23: Ionic Compounds and Naming

Naming Acids

Acids are a special group of binary compounds and have their own naming rules.

All acids begin with H and are dissolved in water

Acids without oxygen◦Use root of anion and add –ic and acid◦HCl is hydrochloric acid

Acids with oxygen◦ -ite becomes –ous◦ -ate becomes –ic◦H2SO3 is sulfurous acid

◦H2SO4 is sulfuric acid

Page 24: Ionic Compounds and Naming

Practice

Name these acids

HF

HNO3

H3PO4

Page 25: Ionic Compounds and Naming

Reversing the process

Write the formulas from these names:

Nitric acidPotassium sulfideSodium carbonateDinitrogen pentoxide

Page 26: Ionic Compounds and Naming

Hydrates

Naming hydrates uses the Greek prefixes as in Type III naming.

First name the binary ionic compound, then the hydrate.

CuSO4.6H2O would be

◦copper (II) sulfate hexahydrate.

Page 27: Ionic Compounds and Naming

Writing word/chemical equations

Solid zinc metal and aqueous lead (II) nitrate react to form aqueous zinc nitrate and solid lead metal.