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Molecular Compounds & Acids
Naming Molecular Compounds & Acids
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Molecules Molecule – two or more atoms covalently bound together
Diatomic molecule – two of the same atom bound together
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Diatomic Elements H, N, O, F, Cl, Br, I or the Magnificent 7
Have No Fear Of Ice Cold Beverages These elements exist as diatomic molecules in their most stable state. For example: Br Br2 I I2 N N2 Cl Cl2 H H2 O O2 F F2
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Binary Molecular Compounds
Binary covalent compounds contain 2 nonmetals No Polyatomic Ions!!!!! No Charges!!!!
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Naming Binary Covalent Compounds
Before you can name binary covalent compounds, you MUST know the prefixes! Mono Di Tri Tetra Penta Hexa Hepta Octa Nona Deca 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
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Rules for naming Binary Covalent Compounds ex. N2F4
Name the prefix for the number of atoms of the first element (ex. Di-) Then name the first element (ex. Dinitrogen) Name the prefix for the number of atoms of the second element (ex. Dinitrogen tetra-) Than name the root of the second element with the ending –ide (ex. Dinitrogen tetrafluoride)
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Note… If the 1st prefix is mono….DROP IT!
Ex. CO is carbon monoxide NOT monocarbon monoxide When the prefix ends in an o or a, and the name of the element begins with a vowel, the o or a is often dropped EX. CO4 would be carbon tetroxide NOT carbon tetraoxide
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Examples What is the name of N2O4? N2 di nitrogen O4 tetra oxide
Since oxide begins with a vowel, we will drop the a in tetra Dinitrogen tetroxide
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More examples Name SO2 S mono sulfur
But mono is with the 1st element, so it will be dropped sulfur O2 dioxide Sulfur dioxide
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More examples Write the formula for dichlorine monoxide
Dichlorine Cl2 Monoxide O Cl2O
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More examples Write the formula for disulfur dichloride Disulfur S2
Dichloride Cl2 S2Cl2
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Acids Acids can be recognized because the start with H Examples HCl
H2SO4 HI
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Acids Acids are in aqueous solution (aq)
For the purposes of this class, we will assume that if it begins with H, we will name it according to the rules of naming acids
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Rule #1 - naming acids If the anion ends in –ide, the acid will be named… Hydro (root) – ic acid Examples HCl Hydrochloric acid HI Hydroiodic acid H2S Hydrosulfuric acid
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Rule #2 – naming acids If you have an H plus an anion ending in –ate, the acid will be named… (root) – ic acid Examples H2SO4 Sulfuric acid HNO3 Nitric acid H3PO4 Phosphoric acid
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Rule # 3 – naming acids If you have an H plus an anion ending in –ite, the acid will be named… (root) – ous acid Examples H2SO3 Sulfurous acid HNO2 Nitrous acid H3PO3 Phosphorous acid
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Writing formulas for acids
When writing formulas for acids you MUST look at the charges of the anion and add as many hydrogens as needed to cancel out the negative charge (because hydrogen is +1) Example: Phosphoric acid Phosphate = PO4-3 So, phosphoric acid = H3PO4
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Remember… ate ic ite - ous
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More examples H2SO3 H2CO3 HF Nitrous acid Perchloric acid Iodic acid
Sulfurous acid Carbonic acid Hydrofluoric acid HNO2 HClO4 HIO3
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Rules for Writing Formulas
Three sets of rules, ionic, covalent, and acids To decide which to use, decide what the first substance is. If is a metal or polyatomic ion use ionic. If it is a non-metal use covalent. If it is hydrogen, use acid rules
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Hydrates Some compounds trap water crystals when they form.
These are hydrates. Both the name and the formula needs to indicate how many water molecules are trapped. In the name we add the word hydrate with a prefix that tells us how many water molecules.
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Hydrates In the formula you put a dot and then write the number of molecules. Calcium chloride dihydrate = CaCl2·2H2O Chromium (III) nitrate hexahydrate = Cr(NO3)3· 6H2O
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Mixed examples (remember to figure out what type of compound it is 1st
KClO2 CO2 H2SO4 NH4Br CuCO3 Fe2O3 HClO Potassium chlorite Carbon dioxide Sulfuric acid Ammonium bromide Copper (II) carbonate Iron (III) oxide Hypochlorous acid
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More Mixed Examples Carbon tetrachloride Phosphorous pentachloride
Aluminum oxide Copper (II) nitrate Chlorous acid Hydrophosphoric acid Iron (III) hydroxide CCl4 PCl5 Al2O3 Cu(NO3)2 HClO2 H3P Fe(OH)3
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