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Binary Ionic Compounds (Type I) Contain a cation and anion The cation is always named first and the anion second
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Binary Ionic Compounds (Type I) A monatomic cation takes its name from the name of the element A monatomic anion is named by taking the first part of the element name and adding -ide
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Binary Ionic Compounds (Type I) Practice LiI Lithium Iodide AgBr Silver Bromide KF Potassium Fluoride Li 3 N Lithium Nitride MgO Magnesium Oxide
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Binary Ionic Compounds (Type II) Involves metals that can form more than one cation In this case, the charge on the metal ion must be specified with Roman numerals
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Binary Ionic Compounds (Type II) An older system uses the ending -ic on the cation with the higher charge and -ous on the cation with lower charge
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Binary Ionic Compounds (Type II) Practice CuCl CuCl 2 Fe 2 O 3 Copper(I) Chloride Copper(II) Chloride Iron(III) Oxide
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Binary Ionic Compounds (Type II) Practice HgO CoCl 2 MnO 2 Mercury(II) Oxide Cobalt(II) Chloride Manganese (IV) Oxide
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Ionic Compound with Polyatomic Ions You must MEMORIZE your polyatomic ions!!!! There are a few hints… Night-rateNO 3 - Night-rightNO 2 -
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Ionic Compound with Polyatomic Ions the polyatomic in a series with less oxygen atoms ends in -ite, the other - ate (The ate ate the ite)
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Ionic Compounds with Polyatomic Ions Continued In summary… per _ ate 1 more Oxygen _ate _ite1 less Oxygen hypo_ite2 less Oxygen
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Practice with Polyatomics NaOH NH 4 Cl NaC 2 H 3 O 2 CaCO 3 Sodium Hydroxide Ammonium Chloride Sodium Acetate Calcium Carbonate
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Practice with Polyatomics KBrO 3 FeSO 4 Mn(OH) 2 Potassium Bromate Iron (II) Sulfate Manganese (II) Hydroxide
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Binary Covalent Compounds Formed between two nonmetals The first element is the full element name The second element is as if it were an anion
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Binary Covalent Compounds Prefixes are used to denote number of atoms present “mono” is never used on cation!
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Prefixes Used In Binary Covalent Compounds Mono- 1 Di-2 Tri-3 Tetra-4 Penta-5 Hexa-6 Hepta-7 Octa-8
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Practice with Binary Covalent Compounds PCl 3 NO 2 CO N 2 O 5 phosphorus trichoride nitrogen dioxide carbon monoxide dinitrogen pentoxide
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Naming Acids Acid can be viewed as a molecule with one or more H + ions attached Rules depend on whether or not oxygen is present
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Naming Acids If the anion DOES NOT contain oxygen the acid is named with the prefix hydro- and the suffix -ic
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Naming Acids Continued If the anion DOES contain oxygen, the acid name is formed from the root name of the anion with a suffix added
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Naming Acids Continued If the anion ends in -ate, the -ate turns to -ic If the anion ends in -ite, the -ite turns to -ous
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Practice Naming Acids HF HCl HNO 3 H 2 SO 4 hydrofluoric acid hydrochloric acid nitric acid sulfuric acid
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Practice Naming Acids HC 2 H 3 O 2 HCN H 2 S HNO 2 acetic acid hydrocyanic acid hydrosulfuric acid nitrous acid
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The Secret To Nomenclature Is… Practice! Practice!! Practice!!!
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