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Ionic compounds containing polyatomic ions

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1 Ionic compounds containing polyatomic ions

2 Review

3 Review So far, we’ve been dealing only with binary ionic compounds

4 Review So far, we’ve been dealing only with binary ionic compounds
Binary compounds form between two elements that ionize, experience an electromagnetic attraction, and form an ionic bond

5 Review So far, we’ve been dealing only with binary ionic compounds
Binary compounds form between two elements that ionize, experience an electromagnetic attraction, and form an ionic bond For example:

6 Review So far, we’ve been dealing only with binary ionic compounds
Binary compounds form between two elements that ionize, experience an electromagnetic attraction, and form an ionic bond For example: Sodium chloride  NaCl

7 Review So far, we’ve been dealing only with binary ionic compounds
Binary compounds form between two elements that ionize, experience an electromagnetic attraction, and form an ionic bond For example: Sodium chloride  NaCl Elements:

8 Review So far, we’ve been dealing only with binary ionic compounds
Binary compounds form between two elements that ionize, experience an electromagnetic attraction, and form an ionic bond For example: Sodium chloride  NaCl Elements: sodium and chlorine

9 Review So far, we’ve been dealing only with binary ionic compounds
Binary compounds form between two elements that ionize, experience an electromagnetic attraction, and form an ionic bond For example: Sodium chloride  NaCl Elements: sodium and chlorine Atoms:

10 Review So far, we’ve been dealing only with binary ionic compounds
Binary compounds form between two elements that ionize, experience an electromagnetic attraction, and form an ionic bond For example: Sodium chloride  NaCl Elements: sodium and chlorine Atoms: 1 sodium and 1 chlorine

11 Review So far, we’ve been dealing only with binary ionic compounds
Binary compounds form between two elements that ionize, experience an electromagnetic attraction, and form an ionic bond For example: Sodium chloride  NaCl Elements: sodium and chlorine Atoms: 1 sodium and 1 chlorine Copper (II) chloride  CuCl2

12 Review So far, we’ve been dealing only with binary ionic compounds
Binary compounds form between two elements that ionize, experience an electromagnetic attraction, and form an ionic bond For example: Sodium chloride  NaCl Elements: sodium and chlorine Atoms: 1 sodium and 1 chlorine Copper (II) chloride  CuCl2 Elements:

13 Review So far, we’ve been dealing only with binary ionic compounds
Binary compounds form between two elements that ionize, experience an electromagnetic attraction, and form an ionic bond For example: Sodium chloride  NaCl Elements: sodium and chlorine Atoms: 1 sodium and 1 chlorine Copper (II) chloride  CuCl2 Elements: copper (II) and chlorine

14 Review So far, we’ve been dealing only with binary ionic compounds
Binary compounds form between two elements that ionize, experience an electromagnetic attraction, and form an ionic bond For example: Sodium chloride  NaCl Elements: sodium and chlorine Atoms: 1 sodium and 1 chlorine Copper (II) chloride  CuCl2 Elements: copper (II) and chlorine Atoms: 1 copper (II) and 2 chlorine

15 Polyatomic ions What is a polyatomic ion?

16 Polyatomic ions What is a polyatomic ion? “poly” means many

17 Polyatomic ions What is a polyatomic ion? “poly” means many
“atomic” means atom

18 Polyatomic ions What is a polyatomic ion? “poly” means many
“atomic” means atom “polyatomic” means many atoms

19 Polyatomic ions What is a polyatomic ion? “poly” means many
“atomic” means atom “polyatomic” means many atoms “Polyatomic ion” means a many atom ion

20 Polyatomic ions What is a polyatomic ion?
“poly” means many “atomic” means atom “polyatomic” means many atoms “Polyatomic ion” means a many atom ion Polyatomic ions are composed of two or more atoms bonded together by covalent bonds

21 Polyatomic ions What is a polyatomic ion?
“poly” means many “atomic” means atom “polyatomic” means many atoms “Polyatomic ion” means a many atom ion Polyatomic ions are composed of two or more atoms bonded together by covalent bonds Covalent bonds involved the sharing of electrons, rather than donating/accepting as in ionic bonds

22 Polyatomic ions What is a polyatomic ion?
“poly” means many “atomic” means atom “polyatomic” means many atoms “Polyatomic ion” means a many atom ion Polyatomic ions are composed of two or more atoms bonded together by covalent bonds Covalent bonds involved the sharing of electrons, rather than donating/accepting as in ionic bonds We will learn more about covalent bonds later

23 Polyatomic ions What is a polyatomic ion?
“poly” means many/several “atomic” means atom “polyatomic” means several atoms “Polyatomic ion” means a many atom ion Polyatomic ions are composed of two or more atoms bonded together by covalent bonds

24 Polyatomic ions What is a polyatomic ion?
“poly” means many/several “atomic” means atom “polyatomic” means several atoms “Polyatomic ion” means a many atom ion Polyatomic ions are composed of two or more atoms bonded together by covalent bonds, with an uneven number of electrons and protons, creating a net charge

25 Polyatomic ions What is a polyatomic ion?
“poly” means many/several “atomic” means atom “polyatomic” means several atoms “Polyatomic ion” means a many atom ion Polyatomic ions are composed of two or more atoms bonded together by covalent bonds, with an uneven number of electrons and protons, creating a net charge

26 Polyatomic ions What is a polyatomic ion?
“poly” means many/several “atomic” means atom “polyatomic” means several atoms “Polyatomic ion” means a many atom ion Polyatomic ions are composed of two or more atoms bonded together by covalent bonds, with an uneven number of electrons and protons, creating a net charge Polyatomic ions act just like other ions

27 Polyatomic ions What is a polyatomic ion?
“poly” means many/several “atomic” means atom “polyatomic” means several atoms “Polyatomic ion” means a many atom ion Polyatomic ions are composed of two or more atoms bonded together by covalent bonds, with an uneven number of electrons and protons, creating a net charge Polyatomic ions act just like other ions Will form bonds with other ions of the opposite charge

28 Polyatomic ions What is a polyatomic ion?
“poly” means many/several “atomic” means atom “polyatomic” means several atoms “Polyatomic ion” means a many atom ion Polyatomic ions are composed of two or more atoms bonded together by covalent bonds, with an uneven number of electrons and protons, creating a net charge Polyatomic ions act just like other ions Will form bonds with other ions of the opposite charge Ionic compounds with polyatomic ions are neutral, just like binary compounds

29 Polyatomic ions What is a polyatomic ion?
“poly” means many/several “atomic” means atom “polyatomic” means several atoms “Polyatomic ion” means a many atom ion Polyatomic ions are composed of two or more atoms bonded together by covalent bonds, with an uneven number of electrons and protons, creating a net charge Polyatomic ions act just like other ions Will form bonds with other ions of the opposite charge Ionic compounds with polyatomic ions are neutral, just like binary compounds For our purposes, polyatomic ions will never split apart so they can be treated as a single object

30 For example: Nitrate

31 For example: Nitrate NO3-

32 For example: Nitrate NO3-
One nitrate ion is composed of 1 atom of nitrogen and 3 atoms of oxygen bonded together by covalent bonds

33 For example: Nitrate NO3-
One nitrate ion is composed of 1 atom of nitrogen and 3 atoms of oxygen bonded together by covalent bonds Nitrate will always have a 1:3 ratio of nitrogen to oxygen

34 For example: Nitrate NO3-
One nitrate ion is composed of 1 atom of nitrogen and 3 atoms of oxygen bonded together by covalent bonds Nitrate will always have a 1:3 ratio of nitrogen to oxygen The nitrogen and the three oxygens are sharing electrons but they also need to accept 1 extra electron in order to fill their valence shells, hence the charge of -1

35 For example: Nitrate NO3-
One nitrate ion is composed of 1 atom of nitrogen and 3 atoms of oxygen bonded together by covalent bonds Nitrate will always have a 1:3 ratio of nitrogen to oxygen The nitrogen and the three oxygens are sharing electrons but they also need to accept 1 extra electron in order to fill their valence shells, hence the charge of -1 Nitrate can form an ionic compound with a cation, just like any other anion. For example:

36 For example: Nitrate NO3-
One nitrate ion is composed of 1 atom of nitrogen and 3 atoms of oxygen bonded together by covalent bonds Nitrate will always have a 1:3 ratio of nitrogen to oxygen The nitrogen and the three oxygens are sharing electrons but they also need to accept 1 extra electron in order to fill their valence shells, hence the charge of -1 Nitrate can form an ionic compound with a cation, just like any other anion. For example: Sodium nitrate

37 For example: Nitrate NO3-
One nitrate ion is composed of 1 atom of nitrogen and 3 atoms of oxygen bonded together by covalent bonds Nitrate will always have a 1:3 ratio of nitrogen to oxygen The nitrogen and the three oxygens are sharing electrons but they also need to accept 1 extra electron in order to fill their valence shells, hence the charge of -1 Nitrate can form an ionic compound with a cation, just like any other anion. For example: Sodium nitrate  Na+ NO3-

38 For example: Nitrate NO3-
One nitrate ion is composed of 1 atom of nitrogen and 3 atoms of oxygen bonded together by covalent bonds Nitrate will always have a 1:3 ratio of nitrogen to oxygen The nitrogen and the three oxygens are sharing electrons but they also need to accept 1 extra electron in order to fill their valence shells, hence the charge of -1 Nitrate can form an ionic compound with a cation, just like any other anion. For example: Sodium nitrate  Na+ NO3-  NaNO3

39 For example: Nitrate NO3-
One nitrate ion is composed of 1 atom of nitrogen and 3 atoms of oxygen bonded together by covalent bonds Nitrate will always have a 1:3 ratio of nitrogen to oxygen The nitrogen and the three oxygens are sharing electrons but they also need to accept 1 extra electron in order to fill their valence shells, hence the charge of -1 Nitrate can form an ionic compound with a cation, just like any other anion. For example: Sodium nitrate  Na+ NO3-  NaNO3 If sodium nitrate is added to water, the sodium ion will separate from the nitrate ion (like other ionic compounds) but the oxygens and nitrogen in the nitrate ion will remain attached

40 Polyatomic ions You do not need to memorize the polyatomic ions, these will be provided for you in a chart

41 Polyatomic ions You do not need to memorize the polyatomic ions, these will be provided for you in a chart As you can see, there are far more polyatomic anions than cations

42 Polyatomic ions You do not need to memorize the polyatomic ions, these will be provided for you in a chart As you can see, there are far more polyatomic anions than cations Subscripts still refer to the number of atoms while superscripts refer to the overall charge

43 Rules for naming compounds containing polyatomic ions

44 Rules for naming compounds containing polyatomic ions
Cation must be written first

45 Rules for naming compounds containing polyatomic ions
Cation must be written first Anion must be written second

46 Rules for naming compounds containing polyatomic ions
Cation must be written first Anion must be written second 3a. If the anion is monoatomic, change ending to ‘ide’

47 Rules for naming compounds containing polyatomic ions
Cation must be written first Anion must be written second 3a. If the anion is monoatomic, change ending to ‘ide’ 3b. If the anion is polyatomic, leave the ending as is

48 Rules for naming compounds containing polyatomic ions
Cation must be written first Anion must be written second 3a. If the anion is monoatomic, change ending to ‘ide’ 3b. If the anion is polyatomic, leave the ending as is For example: Magnesium and carbonate Potassium and chromate Ammonium and oxygen

49 Rules for naming compounds containing polyatomic ions
Cation must be written first Anion must be written second 3a. If the anion is monoatomic, change ending to ‘ide’ 3b. If the anion is polyatomic, leave the ending as is For example: Magnesium and carbonate magnesium carbonate Potassium and chromate Ammonium and oxygen

50 Rules for naming compounds containing polyatomic ions
Cation must be written first Anion must be written second 3a. If the anion is monoatomic, change ending to ‘ide’ 3b. If the anion is polyatomic, leave the ending as is For example: Magnesium and carbonate magnesium carbonate Potassium and chromate potassium chromate Ammonium and oxygen

51 Rules for naming compounds containing polyatomic ions
Cation must be written first Anion must be written second 3a. If the anion is monoatomic, change ending to ‘ide’ 3b. If the anion is polyatomic, leave the ending as is For example: Magnesium and carbonate magnesium carbonate Potassium and chromate potassium chromate Ammonium and oxygen ammonium oxide

52 Rules for writing the formula of compounds containing polyatomic ions

53 Rules for writing the formula of compounds containing polyatomic ions
1. The cation must always be written first

54 Rules for writing the formula of compounds containing polyatomic ions
1. The cation must always be written first 2. The anion must always be written second

55 Rules for writing the formula of compounds containing polyatomic ions
1. The cation must always be written first 2. The anion must always be written second 3. Use subscripts to indicate how many of each ion you need to balance out the charge.

56 Rules for writing the formula of compounds containing polyatomic ions
1. The cation must always be written first 2. The anion must always be written second 3. Use subscripts to indicate how many of each ion you need to balance out the charge. If you need more than one polyatomic ion, put brackets around the entire ion and the subscript outside the brackets.

57 Rules for writing the formula of compounds containing polyatomic ions
1. The cation must always be written first 2. The anion must always be written second 3. Use subscripts to indicate how many of each ion you need to balance out the charge. If you need more than one polyatomic ion, put brackets around the entire ion and the subscript outside the brackets. For example: ammonium oxide

58 Rules for writing the formula of compounds containing polyatomic ions
1. The cation must always be written first 2. The anion must always be written second 3. Use subscripts to indicate how many of each ion you need to balance out the charge. If you need more than one polyatomic ion, put brackets around the entire ion and the subscript outside the brackets. For example: ammonium oxide NH4+ and O2-

59 Rules for writing the formula of compounds containing polyatomic ions
1. The cation must always be written first 2. The anion must always be written second 3. Use subscripts to indicate how many of each ion you need to balance out the charge. If you need more than one polyatomic ion, put brackets around the entire ion and the subscript outside the brackets. For example: ammonium oxide NH4+ and O2- NH4 O

60 Rules for writing the formula of compounds containing polyatomic ions
1. The cation must always be written first 2. The anion must always be written second 3. Use subscripts to indicate how many of each ion you need to balance out the charge. If you need more than one polyatomic ion, put brackets around the entire ion and the subscript outside the brackets. For example: ammonium oxide NH4+ and O2- In order to create a neutral compound, we need 2 ammoniums and 1 oxygen NH4 O

61 Rules for writing the formula of compounds containing polyatomic ions
1. The cation must always be written first 2. The anion must always be written second 3. Use subscripts to indicate how many of each ion you need to balance out the charge. If you need more than one polyatomic ion, put brackets around the entire ion and the subscript outside the brackets. For example: ammonium oxide NH4+ and O2- In order to create a neutral compound, we need 2 ammoniums and 1 oxygen NH4 2O

62 Rules for writing the formula of compounds containing polyatomic ions
1. The cation must always be written first 2. The anion must always be written second 3. Use subscripts to indicate how many of each ion you need to balance out the charge. If you need more than one polyatomic ion, put brackets around the entire ion and the subscript outside the brackets. For example: ammonium oxide NH4+ and O2- In order to create a neutral compound, we need 2 ammoniums and 1 oxygen NH4 2O Without brackets, this means there is one nitrogen, 8 hydrogens, and 1 oxygen. This is not correct!

63 Rules for writing the formula of compounds containing polyatomic ions
1. The cation must always be written first 2. The anion must always be written second 3. Use subscripts to indicate how many of each ion you need to balance out the charge. If you need more than one polyatomic ion, put brackets around the entire ion and the subscript outside the brackets. For example: ammonium oxide NH4+ and O2- In order to create a neutral compound, we need 2 ammoniums and 1 oxygen (NH4)2O

64 Rules for writing the formula of compounds containing polyatomic ions
1. The cation must always be written first 2. The anion must always be written second 3. Use subscripts to indicate how many of each ion you need to balance out the charge. If you need more than one polyatomic ion, put brackets around the entire ion and the subscript outside the brackets. For example: ammonium oxide NH4+ and O2- In order to create a neutral compound, we need 2 ammoniums and 1 oxygen (NH4)2O The brackets show that the subscript 2 is being applied to the whole polyatomic ion

65 Practice Cation Anion Compound name Compound formula Potassium: K+
Nitrate: NO3- Scandium phosphate LiCH3COO Ammonium: Chlorine: Magnesium hydroxide Be3(PO4)2 Lanthanum: Permanganate: Sulfite: Mo2(CO3)3

66 Practice Cation Anion Compound name Compound formula Potassium: K+
Nitrate: NO3- Potassium nitrate KNO3 Scandium phosphate LiCH3COO Ammonium: Chlorine: Magnesium hydroxide Be3(PO4)2 Lanthanum: Permanganate: Sulfite: Mo2(CO3)3

67 Practice Cation Anion Compound name Compound formula Potassium: K+
Nitrate: NO3- Potassium nitrate KNO3 Scandium: Sc3+ Phosphate: PO43- Scandium phosphate ScPO4 LiCH3COO Ammonium: Chlorine: Magnesium hydroxide Be3(PO4)2 Lanthanum: Permanganate: Sulfite: Mo2(CO3)3

68 Practice Cation Anion Compound name Compound formula Potassium: K+
Nitrate: NO3- Potassium nitrate KNO3 Scandium: Sc3+ Phosphate: PO43- Scandium phosphate ScPO4 Lithium: Li+ Acetate: CH3COO Lithium acetate LiCH3COO Ammonium: Chlorine: Magnesium hydroxide Be3(PO4)2 Lanthanum: Permanganate: Sulfite: Mo2(CO3)3

69 Practice Cation Anion Compound name Compound formula Potassium: K+
Nitrate: NO3- Potassium nitrate KNO3 Scandium: Sc3+ Phosphate: PO43- Scandium phosphate ScPO4 Lithium: Li+ Acetate: CH3COO Lithium acetate LiCH3COO Ammonium: NH4+ Chlorine: Cl- Ammonium chloride NH4Cl Magnesium hydroxide Be3(PO4)2 Lanthanum: Permanganate: Ammonium: Sulfite: Mo2(CO3)3

70 Practice Cation Anion Compound name Compound formula Potassium: K+
Nitrate: NO3- Potassium nitrate KNO3 Scandium: Sc3+ Phosphate: PO43- Scandium phosphate ScPO4 Lithium: Li+ Acetate: CH3COO Lithium acetate LiCH3COO Ammonium: NH4+ Chlorine: Cl- Ammonium chloride NH4Cl Magnesium: Mg2+ Hydroxide: OH- Magnesium hydroxide Mg(OH)2 Be3(PO4)2 Lanthanum: Permanganate: Ammonium: Sulfite: Mo2(CO3)3

71 Practice Cation Anion Compound name Compound formula Potassium: K+
Nitrate: NO3- Potassium nitrate KNO3 Scandium: Sc3+ Phosphate: PO43- Scandium phosphate ScPO4 Lithium: Li+ Acetate: CH3COO Lithium acetate LiCH3COO Ammonium: NH4+ Chlorine: Cl- Ammonium chloride NH4Cl Magnesium: Mg2+ Hydroxide: OH- Magnesium hydroxide Mg(OH)2 Beryllium: Be2+ Beryllium phosphate Be3(PO4)2 Lanthanum: Permanganate: Ammonium: Sulfite: Mo2(CO3)3

72 Practice Cation Anion Compound name Compound formula Potassium: K+
Nitrate: NO3- Potassium nitrate KNO3 Scandium: Sc3+ Phosphate: PO43- Scandium phosphate ScPO4 Lithium: Li+ Acetate: CH3COO Lithium acetate LiCH3COO Ammonium: NH4+ Chlorine: Cl- Ammonium chloride NH4Cl Magnesium: Mg2+ Hydroxide: OH- Magnesium hydroxide Mg(OH)2 Beryllium: Be2+ Beryllium phosphate Be3(PO4)2 Lanthanum: La3+ Permanganate: MnO4- Lanthanum permanganate La(MnO4)3 Ammonium: Sulfite: Mo2(CO3)3

73 Practice Cation Anion Compound name Compound formula Potassium: K+
Nitrate: NO3- Potassium nitrate KNO3 Scandium: Sc3+ Phosphate: PO43- Scandium phosphate ScPO4 Lithium: Li+ Acetate: CH3COO Lithium acetate LiCH3COO Ammonium: NH4+ Chlorine: Cl- Ammonium chloride NH4Cl Magnesium: Mg2+ Hydroxide: OH- Magnesium hydroxide Mg(OH)2 Beryllium: Be2+ Beryllium phosphate Be3(PO4)2 Lanthanum: La3+ Permanganate: MnO4- Lanthanum permanganate La(MnO4)3 Sulfite: SO32- Ammonium sulfite (NH4)2SO3 Mo2(CO3)3

74 Practice Cation Anion Compound name Compound formula Potassium: K+
Nitrate: NO3- Potassium nitrate KNO3 Scandium: Sc3+ Phosphate: PO43- Scandium phosphate ScPO4 Lithium: Li+ Acetate: CH3COO Lithium acetate LiCH3COO Ammonium: NH4+ Chlorine: Cl- Ammonium chloride NH4Cl Magnesium: Mg2+ Hydroxide: OH- Magnesium hydroxide Mg(OH)2 Beryllium: Be2+ Beryllium phosphate Be3(PO4)2 Lanthanum: La3+ Permanganate: MnO4- Lanthanum permanganate La(MnO4)3 Sulfite: SO32- Ammonium sulfite (NH4)2SO3 Molybdenum (III): Mo3+ Carbonate: CO32- Molybdenum (III) carbonate Mo2(CO3)3


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