Categories: All - acid - binary - molecular

by Boparai Harreet 1 year ago

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Unit 2: Chemistry (Name to Formula)

In chemistry, the naming conventions for compounds depend on the type of compound being named. For binary compounds, the metal's name appears first followed by the non-metal with an '

Unit 2: Chemistry (Name to Formula)

Unit 2: Chemistry (Formula to Name)

prefix shows the number of atoms in the formula. mono = 1, di = 2, tri = 3.

Keeps the name and has a 2 next to it represnting that it has the 2 of the same atoms. ex. H2 = hydrogen

base: starts with the metal and ends with hydroxide. ex. Na(OH) => sodium hydroxide.

binary acid: hydro should be the prefix. then element name, which ends with -ic acid. ex. HBr => hydrobromic acid

oxy acid: polyatomic ending "ate" is removed and replaced with -ic acid. ex. H2CO3 => carbonic acid

is it a polyatomic derivatives?

Ex. Nitrate 2 less oxygen: hyponitrite (NO)1- 1 less oxygen: nitrite (NO2)1- Normal: chlorate (ClO3)1- 1 more oxygen: perchlorate (NO4)1-

Is it a polyatomic ionic compound?

yes?
Cation (+) followed by anion, only changing to "ide" if single atom anion. ex. Au2O3 => gold (III) oxide

is it binary compound?

Yes?
metal's name comes first. nonmetal comes in second. non-metal ending is changed to "ide"

is it a multivalent?

yes? Then the name of the metal goes first. Afterwards, add Roman numerals in brackets. the non-metal ends with -ide. ex. tin (II) oxide

Unit 2: Chemistry (Name to Formula)

is it a molecular compound?

does any of the elements have: mono, di, tri, tetra, penta, hexa, hept, octa, nona, deca? ex. phosphorus pentasulphide => PS5

is it a diatomic?

is it written as: (naturally have 2 of the same atoms) hydrogen - h2, nitrogen - N2, chlorine - Cl2, iodine - I2, oxygen - O2, fluorine - F2, bromine - Br2

is it an acid or base?

no?
base: does it have hydroxide? ex. sodium hydroxide

does it have -ic acid at the end?

binary acid: does it contain hydro as a prefix? ex. hydrochloric acid ==> HCl

oxy acid: does it contain hydrogen, oxygen and one other element? ex. sulfuric acid ==> H2(SO4)

is it an polyatomic ionic compound?

does it contain more than 2 elements but still have a cation and anion?

does it have any of these? nitrate, carbonate, chlorate, sulfate, phosphate, ammonium, hydroxide, acetate, bicarbonate/hydrogen carbonate, chromate, or permanganate? ex. sulfate => (SO4)2-

is it a polyatomic ion derivatives?

does it also end with any of these: hypo-ite, -ite or per-ate? ex. hyponitrite => (NO)1-

Is it a multivalent Binary Ionic?

Does it have a metal with more then one ionic charge combined with a non-metal? ex. lead (IV) chloride => PbCl4

Is it a binary compound?

no?
==>
yes?
Does it have metal as 1st and non-metal as 2nd? ex. lithium (metal) and oxygen (non-metal) ==> Li2O