
Chapter 7 Section 1.2
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Chemistry
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10th - 12th Grade
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Practice Problem
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Medium
Abby Fancsali
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13 Slides • 10 Questions
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Chapter 7 Section 1.2 & 2: Naming Binary Molecular Compounds
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Fill in the Blanks
Type answer...
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Multiple Choice
What ending is used for negative anions
-ide
-ite
-ion
-ex
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Stock-System
For d-block elements that form multiple anions, roman numerals that tell the charge are used to distinguish them
Cu+ = Copper(I)
Cu2+ = Copper(II)
These numerals are used in the names of compounds
CuCl2 = Copper(II) Chloride
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Compounds containing Polyatomic Ions
Most polyatomic ions are negatively charged
Most polyatomic ions are oxyanions
contain oxygen
Some elements can form with oxygen in multiple ways to form different ions
The one with the greater number of oxygen atoms = -ate
smaller number of oxygen atoms = -ite
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Compounds containing Polyatomic Ions
Some elements form more than two oxyanions
Oxyanion less than -ite ion has the prefix hypo-
Oxyanion greater than -ate has the prefix per-
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Compounds containing Polyatomic ions
Compounds with polyatomic ions are named the same way as monoatomic ions
Cation name first, then the anion name
AgNO4= Silver Nitrate
AgNO3=Silver Nitrite
If multiples of a polyatomic ion are present, the ion is in parenthesis in the formula
Aluminum Sulfate = Al2(SO4)2
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Multiple Choice
These polyatomic ions contain oxygen
oxyanions
oxites
oxates
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Multiple Choice
Which Polyatomic ion has the most oxygen atoms
hypochlorite
chlorite
chlorate
perchlorate
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Naming Binary Molecular Compounds
Molecular compounds are composed of individual covalently bonded units
Two methods are used to name them
Old method uses prefixes
Stock System using oxidation numbers
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Naming using Prefixes
Prefix before an element name tells you how many there are
CO = Carbon Monoxide
CCl4= Carbon Tetrachloride
N2O= Dinitrogen monoxide
N2O3= Dinitrogen Trioxide
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Rules for naming Molecular Compounds
Rules to follow
The element with the lower group number comes first, if in the same group, the larger period number is first
Add a prefix if the first element has more than one atom
The second element is named by
combining a prefix indicating the number of atoms contributed by the element,
the root of the name of the element
the ending -ide
Drop the "o" or "a" in the prefix the beginning if the next letter would be a vowel
Monoxide
In general element order is: C, P, N, H, S, I, Br, Cl, O, F
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Acids & Salts
Acid refers to the compound in an aqueous solution
There are different types of acids
Binary acids= consist of two elements
usually Hydrogen and a halogen
Oxyacids= Consist of hydrogen, oxygen, and one other element
Many polyatomic ions are produced by the loss of hydrogen ions from oxyacids
Salt: an ionic compound composed of a cation and the anion from an acid
Some salts contain more than one hydrogen atom, they have "hydrogen" or "Bi-" added to their name
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Multiple Choice
"An ionic compound composed of a cation and the anion from an acid "is known as what?
An Acid product
a Salt
A Base
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Section 2: Oxidation Numbers
Oxidation Numbers/States: Indicate the general distribution of electrons among the bonding atoms in a molecular compound/polyatomic ion
Can be quite arbitrary
help in naming compounds and balancing equations
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Rules for Assigning Oxidation Numbers
The atoms in a pure element have an oxidation number of 0
Na2 has an oxidation of 0
The more electronegative element in a binary compound is the same as it would be as an anion and same for the cation/less electronegative element
Fluorine always has a -1 number
Oxygen has an oxidation number of -2 in almost all compounds
exceptions are peroxides (-1) and when combined with F (+2)
Hydrogen has a +1 in all more electronegative elements and a -1 charge when with metals
Sum of oxidation numbers in a neutral compound is 0
Sum of oxidation numbers in polyatomic ions is equal to the charge
All rules above apply to ionic compounds as well
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Using Oxidation Numbers for formula names
Many nonmetals can have more than one oxidation number
Table six on page 235
Using oxidation numbers and the Stock System of naming allows us to be more specific about an compound
Oxidation numbers are the basis for the roman numeral system for naming compounds
Oxidation numbers can give predictions of possible combinations of atoms
Known oxidation numbers can lead to the discovery of unknown numbers
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How to even use this
Always start with the oxidation number that you know and work backwards.
On the board Practice: Pages 233 & 234
Chapter 7 Section 1.2 & 2: Naming Binary Molecular Compounds
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