UNIT 5 NOMENCLATURE

CH. 6

There are approx. 100 elements but millions of compounds.

≈ 100,000 Ionic (Inorganic) Cpds.

> 4, 000, 000 Molecular (Organic) Cpds.

Only the 6 noble gases like Ne & He do not form cpds.

Compound (cpd.) – a chemical combination of atoms of 2 or more elements; where elements have lost, gained or shared electrons

Alloy – a physical combination of metals made by melting them together, ex. Sterling silver, stainless steel, brass, etc.

THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION IS EXTREMELY IMPORTANT!! IT IS THE FOUNDATION OF ALL CHEMISTRY!!

2 Kinds of Compounds

Molecular Ionic

1. Combination of 2 or more nonmetals 1. Combination of 1 metal and 1 or more nonmetals

2. Covalently bonded – electrons shared 2. Ionically bonded - metals lose e-‘s and

nonmetals gain e-‘s

3. Molecule is the base unit 3. Ion is the base unit.

4. Ex. – CO2, H2O, NH3, C6H12O6 4. Ex. – NaCl, Fe2O3, NaHCO3

carbon dioxide, water, ammonia, glucose sodium chloride, rust, baking soda

5. Named with prefixes 5. Name metal ion, then nonmetal ion

6. Low melting point – 6. High melting point –

O2(-218oC), H2O (0 oC) NaCl (801 oC)

7. Most are gases or liquids at room temp. 7. Most are crystalline solids (salts) at room temp.

Molecule – smallest electrically neutral unit of a substance that still has the properties of that substance

Octet rule – atoms react by gaining, losing, or sharing electrons so as to acquire the stable electron structure of a noble gas, usually 8 electrons

Sugar and Salt Conductivity Demonstration

Ionic Compounds / Molecular Compounds
Metal & Nonmetal / All Nonmetals
Ionic Bonding / Covalent Bonding
Ions / Molecules
Electrolytes / Nonelectrolytes
Salts / Sugars, Fats, Alcohols, Oils, Carbohydrates, etc.

Electrolyte – a compound that conducts electricity in aqueous solution

Nonelectrolyte – a compound that does not conduct electricity in aqueous solution

SUPER IMPORTANT!!!

THE GROUP # TELLS YOU THE NUMBER OF VALENCE ELECTRONS (THE ONES IN THE OUTERMOST SHELL INVOLVED IN BONDING)

The group number will tell you all about how an element will bond and the number of electrons it loses, gains or shares.

***For metal in groups 1A & 2A only: group # = ionic charge

To name metal ions use the element name followed by the word ion.

Ex. Na+ sodium ion Mg+2 magnesium ion

***For nonmetals above the stair step but not touching it: group # - 8 = ionic charge

To name nonmetal ions, use the root of the element with –ide ending followed by ion.

Group 5 – 8 = -3 N-3 nitride ion

P-3 phosphide ion

Group 6 – 8 = -2 O-2 oxide ion

S-2 sulfide ion

Se-2 selenide ion

Group 7 – 8 = -1 F- or F-1fluoride ion

Cl- or Cl-1chloride ion

Br- or Br-1 bromide ion

I-  or I -1 iodide ion

II- 

MEMORIZE THE FOLLOWING:

Diatomic (2 atoms) Molecules: H2, N2, O2, F2, Cl2, Br2, I2

Called: hydrogen gas, nitrogen gas, oxygen gas, fluorine gas, chlorine gas, bromine gas and iodine gas

Triatomic (3 atoms) Molecule: O3 ozone which, of course, absorbs UV rays from sun

Ionic Cpds.

Ions – atoms or groups of atoms that have a charge due to the loss or gain of electrons

Metals – lose electrons to form cations (+)

Nonmetals – gain electrons to form anions (-)

Polyatomic (Many atoms) ions – groups of atoms that behave as a unit and carry a charge

Ex. PO4-3 phosphate, SO4-2 sulfate, NO3- nitrate

**Mother nature changes elements into ions to achieve stability.

The noble gases are the most stable elements because of their full outer shell of electrons. All the other elements react in such a way as to make their electron configuration like the noble gases, i.e. they imitate the noble gases by losing, gaining or sharing electrons

Group 4A Elements are not usually found in Ionic Compounds because:

For Group 4A Elements C & Si, they don’t know whether to lose 4 electrons or gain 4 electrons so they share electrons instead, covalently bonding forming molecular compounds.

Chemical Nomenclature – a naming system for chemicals based on IUPAC rules

IUPAC – International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry

A Elements – Representative, follow rules and exhibit properties similar to other elements in the same group

A Elements include: alkali metals, alkaline earth metals, nonmetals (above stair step) and noble gases

B Elements – Misbehavers, have properties between metals and nonmetals, so they have many exceptions to the rules

B Elements include: transition metals, inner transition metals, metalloids

B Elements (Misbehavers) that only form one ion: Ag+, Zn+2, Cd+2, Al+3

Group # = charge

**IMPORTANT: ALL CPDS. HAVE A CHARGE OF ZERO!

Binary cpds. Contain 2 elements

Binary Ionic Cpds. – contain 1 metal and 1 nonmetal

**SUPER IMPORTANT!!

Roman Numerals are only used to indicate the charge of Misbehavers (ions that form more than one charge). They are not used for elements like Na or Ca that are representative.

The Front half of an ionic cpd is always a + metal

The Back half of an ionic cpd is always a – nonmetal

You can always figure out the charge of the back half from the front half

SnO → 1Sn+2 + 1O-2 tin (II) or stannous oxide

Mn2S3 → 2Mn+3 + 3S-2 manganese (III) or manganic sulfide

2 Ways to do a formula:

1. Write a formula from a name

2. Write a name from a formula

Ex. From a name:

Sodium Fluoride Na+ + F- → NaF

Iron (III) Oxide 2Fe+3 + 3O-2 → Fe2O3

Ex. From a Formula:

KF → K+ + F-

Potassium fluoride

CaCl2 → Ca+2 + 2F-

Calcium fluoride

Parentheses are only used on polyatomic ions when there is more than one of them.

Ex. w/out parentheses

NaNO3 → Na+ + NO3-

Sodium nitrate

Ca(NO3)2 → Ca+2 + 2NO3-

Calcium nitrate

Hydroxide (OH-), Cyanide (CN-) and ammonium (NH4+) need parentheses also when there is more than one of them.

Fe(OH)3 Ca(CN)2 (NH4)3PO4

Acids – cpds that give off H+ when dissolved in water

Bases – cpds that give off OH- when dissolved in water

Water is neutral because it dissociates into equal parts of acid and base

1H2O → 1 H+ + 1 OH-

equal parts of acid and base

pH = -log[H+]

pH scale 0 >7>14

acid base

**RECOGNIZE AN ACID BY SEEING THE H ON THE FRONT!!

General Formula is HX where X is a monatomic or polyatomic anion

Name an acid by looking at the anion (negative, back half)

If anion ends in: Then acid name is:

-ide hydro_____ic acid

-ite _____ous acid

-ate _____ic acid

HCl → H+ + Cl- anion is chloride so acid name is hydrochloric acid

H2SO3 → 2H+ + SO3-2 anion is sulfite so acid name is sulfurous acid

H2SO4 → 2H+ + SO4-2 anion is sulfate so acid name is sulfuric acid

**IONIC CPD. NOMENCLATURE SUMMARY:

To write a formula from a name:

1.  Find element on periodic table.

2.  Write down symbol and charge of metal and nonmetal

3.  Balance charges using coefficients if needed.

4.  Coefficients become subscripts in formula.

5.  Remember, there are no charges in a formula.

To write a name from a formula:

1.  Break up formula into ions with correct charges.

2.  Subscripts become coefficients.

3.  If misbehaver, figure out back half charge first.

4.  Name each ion.

5.  Write stock and classical name if it is an ion with more than one charge (misbehaver).

**MOLECULAR CPD. NOMENCLATURE:

1.  The cpd will have only 2 nonmetals.

2.  There are no charges and no reactions to show.

3.  No mono- or –ide on 1st element.

4.  Put –ide on root of 2nd element.

5.  Use prefixes to indicate subscripts.

Molecular Prefixes:

Naming Molecular Cpds.

1st Element / 2nd Element
No mono- / Use mono-
No-ide / Use - ide
Use prefixes / Use prefixes

1 – mono

2 – di

3 – tri

4 – tetra

5 – penta

6 – hexa

7 – hepta

8 – octa

9 – nona

10 - deca