Mullis1 Naming Compounds Binary Ionic Compounds Cation (+ charge ) is listed first. Name of cation is the chemical name. –For many transition metals, the.

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Presentation transcript:

Mullis1 Naming Compounds Binary Ionic Compounds Cation (+ charge ) is listed first. Name of cation is the chemical name. –For many transition metals, the ion is distinguished by the addition of a roman numeral after the chemical name. –Find charge of the anion and choose appropriate roman numeral to balance the charge. Name of the anion ends in –ide. Examples: Al 2 O 3 aluminum oxide CuBr 2 copper(II) bromide

Mullis2 Naming Molecular Compounds Binary Molecular Compounds If more than one atom, name the first element with a numerical prefix. Name the second element with a numerical prefix and a suffix –ide. For prefixes, drop o or a if the element name begins with a vowel. (Examples are monoxide and pentoxide.) Examples: N 2 O 4 dinitrogen tetroxide OF 2 oxygen difluoride

Mullis3 Numerical Prefixes NumberPrefix 1mono- 2di- 3tri- 4tetra- 5penta- 6hexa- 7hepta- 8octa- 9nona- 10deca-

Mullis4 Polyatomic ions Poly = many Atomic = atoms Entire group of atoms is an ion with a positive or negative charge. Within the polyatomic ion, atoms are bound covalently. Examples: Sulfate ion SO 4 2- S Carbonate ion CO 3 2- C

Mullis5 Chemical Equations Law of conservation of mass: Atoms are neither created nor destroyed (in ordinary chemical reactions). –number of atoms on left = number of atoms on right The correct formula must be shown for all reactants and products. –Use oxidation states and ionic charges to correctly write a formula –In balancing, do not split up molecules or change the formula. –Remember common polyatomic ions and diatomic molecules.

Mullis6 Symbols used in Equations Yields Reversible reaction Reactants are heated Catalyst added (s) solid state or precipitate (l) liquid state (g) gaseous state (aq) aqueous state, or dissolved in water heat or catalyst

Mullis7 Order for Balancing MINOH method (Me know chemistry, said Tarzan as he climbed the stoichiome-tree.) M - metalsBalance metals first. I - ionsBalance polyatomic ions. N – nonmetalsBalance Cl, S,N. O – oxygen * H – hydrogen *An odd # on one side and even on other will require you to multiply the odd side to make it even!

Mullis8 Steps to balance a chemical equation 1.Write the formulas and symbols. Cu(s) + Ag(NO 3 )(aq) Ag(s) + Cu(NO 3 ) 2 (aq) 2.Count the atoms on each side of the arrow. 1 Cu 1 Cu 1 Ag1 Ag 1 N 2 N 3 O6 O 3.Balance by using coefficients. Do not change subscripts! Cu(s) + 2Ag(NO 3 )(aq) 2Ag(s) + Cu(NO 3 ) 2 (aq) 4.Check work by counting each element. 1 Cu 1 Cu 2 Ag2Ag 2 N 2 N 6 O6 O

Mullis9 Two Important Principles 1.Every chemical compound has a formula that cannot be altered. 2.A chemical reaction must account for every atom used. (Law of Conservation of Matter)

Mullis10 Synthesis reactions (composition reactions) A + B AB 1.Reactions with O 2 or S 8 Oxides or sulfides formed 16Rb + S 8 8Rb 2 S2Mg + O 2 2MgO 2.Metals with halogens a.Ionic compounds formed b.Examples are NaF and NaCl

Mullis11 Synthesis reactions, cont. A + B AB 3.Two compounds combine to form a single product. N 2 O 3 + H 2 O 2HNO 2 4.Oxides with water a. With metal: Metal hydroxides produced CaO + H 2 O Ca(OH) 2 b. With nonmetal: Oxyacids produced SO 3 + H 2 O H 2 SO 4

Mullis12 Synthesis reactions, cont. A + B AB 5.Metal oxides with CO 2 5.Carbonates produced 6.CaO + CO 2 CaCO 3 6.Metal oxides with SO 2 Sulfites produced CaO + SO 2 CaSO 3

Mullis13 Decomposition reactions AB A + B 1.Binary compounds split up a.Electrolysis is decomposition by electric current Example: H 2 O2H 2 + O 2 b.Electrolysis is decomposition by electric current 2.Metals with carbonates a.Metal oxide and carbon dioxide are formed b.Example: CaCO 3 CaO + CO 2 3.Metal hydroxides a.When heated, metal hydroxides decompose to metal oxide and water. b.Example: Ca(OH) 2 CaO + H 2 O electricity

Mullis14 Decomposition reactions AB A + B 4.Metal chlorates a.When heated, metal chlorates decompose to metal chloride and oxygen. b.Example: 2KClO 3 2KCl + 3O 2 5.Decomposition of acids a.Some acids decompose into nonmetal oxides and water. b.Example: H 2 CO 3 CO 2 + H 2 O

Mullis15 Single Replacement Reactions C + AB A + CB 1.Metal replaces another metal Replacing metal must be the more active metal! Example: 2Al + 3Pb(NO 3 ) 2 3Pb + 2Al(NO 3 ) 3 2.Metal replaces H in water a.Active metals produce metal hydroxide and water b.Less reactive metals make metal oxide and hydrogen gas Examples: 2Na + 2H 2 O2NaOH + H 2 3Fe + 4H 2 OFe 3 O 4 + 4H 2

Mullis16 Single Replacement Reactions C + AB A + CB 3.Metal replaces H in an acid More active metals involved Example: Mg + 2HClH 2 + MgCl 2 4.Halogen replaces another halogen Fluorine is most reactive and replaces others. Example: Cl 2 + 2KBr2KCl + Br 2 Br 2 + 2KClNo reaction

Mullis17 Double Replacement Reactions AB + CD AD + CB 1.Precipitate forms (a salt). Example: 2KI(aq) + Pb(NO 3 ) 2 (aq)PbI 2 (s) + 2KNO 3 (aq) 2.Gas forms. FeS(s) + 2HCl(aq)H 2 S (g) + 2FeCl 2 (aq) 3.Water forms. NaOH(aq) + HCl(aq)NaCl (aq) + H 2 O (l)

Mullis18 Combustion Reactions CH 4 + 2O 2  2H 2 O + CO 2 One of the reactants is oxygen. In this class, all or our combustion reactions will be oxygen and hydrocarbons. The products of this type of combustion reaction will always be water and carbon dioxide. To quickly balance combustion reactions, START WITH WATER and multiply it by an EVEN coefficient.

Mullis19 Practice: Balancing equations 1. Solid sodium combines with chlorine gas to produce solid sodium chloride. 2. When solid copper reacts with aqueous silver nitrate, the products are aqueous copper(II) nitrate and solid silver. 3. In a blast furnace, the reaction between solid iron(III) oxide and carbon monoxide gas produces solid iron and carbon dioxide gas.

Mullis20 Practice: Balancing equations 1. Solid sodium combines with chlorine gas to produce solid sodium chloride. 2. When solid copper reacts with aqueous silver nitrate, the products are aqueous copper(II) nitrate and solid silver. 3. In a blast furnace, the reaction between solid iron(III) oxide and carbon monoxide gas produces solid iron and carbon dioxide gas.

Mullis21 Reaction types: Summary SynthesisReactantProduct OxygenOxide HalogenHalide H 2 O + nonmetal oxide Acid H 2 O + metal oxide Base (R-OH) Decomposition ReactantProduct Binary comp.Elements Metal CO 3 Metal oxide & CO 2 Metal OHMetal oxide & H 2 O Metal ClO 3 Metal chloride & O 2 AcidsNonmetal oxide & H 2 O

Mullis22 Reaction types: Summary, cont. Single replacement Single and a couple Couple and a single 1. Metal replaces metal in compound 2. Metal replaces H in waterH 2 (g) product 3. Metal replaces H in acid H 2 (g) product 4. Halogen replaces another Double replacement 2 couples2 different couples 1. Precipitate forms (s) product 2. Gas forms(g) product 3. Water formsH 2 O product