Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byNora McCoy Modified over 8 years ago
1
Molecular compounds The difference between molecules and the ionic compounds we’ve been studying so far…..
2
Molecules are compounds formed from one or more non- metals
3
These atoms share electrons (this is called covalent bonding); they don’t gain or lose electrons
4
Molecules are compounds formed from one or more non-metals These atoms share electrons (this is called covalent bonding); they don’t gain or lose electrons The atoms that form molecules are from the group of atoms which normally gain electrons (anions
5
Oxygen atom has how many electrons? Ion? Hydrogen atom has how many electrons? Ion?
6
Hydrogen Oxygen H 2 O is a molecular compound The atoms share electrons and stick together There is no charge to the molecule, unlike ions
7
Magnesium chloride is an ionic compound MgCl 2 Cl 17 P Mg 12 P Cl 17 P +2
8
Naming binary molecular compounds Use prefixes to write the names for binary molecular compounds to indicate the number of each element The order of elements in a binary molecular compound is increasing group number o CO 2, not O 2 C CO 2, what we exhale, is carbon di oxide CCl 4, dry cleaning fluid, is carbon tetra chloride They all end in –ide, like binary ionic compounds
9
Prefixes used in naming binary molecular compounds PrefixNumberPrefixNumber mono-1hexa-6 di-2hepta-7 tri-3octa-8 tetra-4nona-9 penta-5deca-10
10
Acids Acids are any compounds which, when dissolved in water, produce hydrogen ions (H + ) They are any ionic compounds where the cation is H + We name them using “hydro” followed by the anion name ending in -ic
11
Examples of acids Binary acids – HFhydrofluoric acid – HClhydrochloric acid Polyatomic acids – HNO 3 nitric acid – HNO 2 nitrous acid
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.