AP Nomenclature
Common Ions and Nomenclature
- Memorize the AP Common Ions Memorizing the list of ions is not difficult, but it does take time. You are unlikely to pass the ion test if you wait until September to start memorizing. Many people like using flash cards.
- Learn correct spellings, formulas and charges
- Be able to read charges for type I ions from the periodic table
- First test: Fri Sept 4. I will give you names of ions, you will write the formulas and charges.
- Second test: Fri Sept 11. I will give you compound names (you write the formulas) and compound formulas (you write the names). Yes, spelling counts. Capitalization also counts.
1st year chemistry nomenclature notes [Summary is first, complete notes plus practice follow]
Compound TypesIdentify the type by looking at the first half of the compound
- Ionic: metal (known charge) + nonmetal
- Name the metal, then the nonmetal
- Nonmetal has –ide ending.
CaCl2: calcium chloride
Ca3(PO4)2: calcium phosphate
Ca3P2: calcium phosphide
- Ionic: metal (variable charge) + nonmetal
- Identify the charge of the metal
- Name the metal, put the charge in () as a Roman numeral
- Name the nonmetal (-ide ending).
Fe2O3: iron(III) oxide
CuO: copper(II) oxide
Cu2O: copper(I) oxide
- Covalent: nonmetal + nonmetal
- Use prefixes to identify the relative number of atoms in the compound.
- First element: use element name; second: use –ide ending (like anions)
- ‘Mono’ is not used for the first element.
- Some names use contractions: monoxide, not monoxide.
1: mono
2: di
3: tri
4: tetra
5: penta
6: hexa
7: hepta
8: octa
9: nona
10: deca
BF3boron trifluoride
N2O5dinitrogen pentoxide
CCl4: carbon tetrachloride
NO2:nitrogen dioxide
- Acids: H + anion
Without oxygen:
HCl: hydrochloric acid
H2S: hydrosulfuric acid
With oxygen:
H2SO4: sulfate ion sulfuric acid;
H2SO3: sulfite ion sulfurous acid
5 NomenclatureLonger version
Early chemists made up names for compounds without a system:
sugar of lead; blue vitriol; quicklime; Epsom salts; milk of magnesia; gypsum; laughing gas
Nomenclature: naming system; name describes the composition of the compound
5.1 Naming Compounds
Binary compounds: compounds composed of two elements
Compound Types
- Ionic: metal (known charge) + nonmetal
Name the metal, then the nonmetal; nonmetal has –ide ending.
CaCl2: calcium chloride
Ca3(PO4)2: calcium phosphate
Ca3P2: calcium phosphide
CsF: cesium chloride
AlCl3: aluminum chloride
MgI2: magnesium iodide
- Ionic: metal (variable charge) + nonmetal
Identify the charge of the metal; name the metal, put the charge in () as a Roman numeral; name the nonmetal (-ide ending).
Copper has more than one possible charge. The charge must be added to the name.
CuO: copper(II) oxide
Cu2O: copper(I) oxide
Fe2O3: iron(III) oxide
5.2 Naming Binary Compounds that contain a Metal and a Nonmetal (Types I and II)
Some metal atoms can form two or more cations:.
Type I compounds: the metal present forms only one type of cation Na is always 1+
Type II compounds: the metal present can from two (or more) cations that have different charges
Cr can form Cr2+ and Cr3+; Cu can form Cu+ and Cu2+
Naming Type I Ionic Compounds
- Cation is first, then the anion.
- Cations (except the polyatomic one) take their names from the element name.
- Anions from a single atom are named by adding –ide to the root of the name.
Ex 5.1 Type I binary compounds
Compound formula ions ion names compound name
CsFCs+cesiumcesium fluoride
F-fluoride
AlCl3Al3+aluminumaluminum chloride
Cl-chloride
MgI2Mg2+magnesiummagnesium iodide
I-iodide
Type II binary compounds
When a cation has variable charges, the specific charge needs to be in the compound name.
Use roman numerals to give the charge.
ExFeCl2Fe2+ or Fe3+?[charge on Fe?] + 2(1-) = 0 charge is 2+
Cl-2+ + 2- = 0 [no net charge for compound]
Name: iron (II) chloride
Since there are two chloride ions, the iron must have a charge of 2+ to result in a neutral compound.
* Note that the II refers to the charge, not the subscript number*
FeCl3 = iron (III) chloride
Ex. PbO2O2-Pb?+ + 2(2-) = 0; Pb4+
Lead (IV) oxide
Alternate system: The ion with the higher charge has a name ending in –ic;
The ion with the lower charge has a name ending in –ous.
Fe3+ = ferricFe2+ = ferrous
Ex. 5.2 Type II binary
- CuClCu?+Cu+copper (I) chloride
Cl-
- HgOHg?+Hg2+mercury (II) oxide
O2-
- Fe2O3Fe?+6+Fe3+iron (III) oxide
O2-6-
- MnO2Mn?+ 4+Mn4+manganese (IV) oxide
O2-4-
- PbCl4Pb?+4+Pb4+lead (IV) chloride
Cl-4-
Rules: 1. Cation first, then anion 2. Because the cation can have more than one charge, specify the charge with a roman numeral in parentheses.
5.3 Naming Binary Compounds that Contain Only Nonmetals (Type III)
Covalent: nonmetal + nonmetal
What would make good names for NO and NO2? need a way to distinguish these two ‘nitrogen oxides’
Rules for Naming Type III Binary Compounds
- The first element in the formula is named first (full element name).
- The second element is named as though it were an anion.
- Prefixes are used to denote the numbers of atoms present.
- The prefix mono- is never used for naming the first element. For example, CO is called carbon monoxide, not monocarbon monoxide.
BF3boron trifluoride
NOnitrogen monoxide [aka nitric oxide]
N2O5dinitrogen pentoxide
CCl4: carbon tetrachloride
NO2:nitrogen dioxide
IF3:iodine trifluoride
1: mono2: di3: tri4: tetra5: penta
6: hexa7: hepta8: octa9: nona10: deca
5.4 Naming Binary Compounds: Strategy / Review
* Use the periodic table to determine which elements are metals, nonmetals and transition metals.
5.5 Naming Compounds that Contain Polyatomic Ions
Polyatomic ions: several atoms bound together (covalently) that have a charge
Oxyanions
=Polyatomic ions that contains an atom of an element, and different numbers of oxygen
The ion with a smaller number of oxygen atoms has an –ite ending
The ion with a bigger number of oxygen atoms has an –ate ending
If there are more than 2 oxyanions in a series, hypo- (less than) and per- (more than) are used as prefixes to indicate the ion with the fewest number of oxygen, and the one with the most
Ex.
ClO-hypochlorite
ClO2-chlorite
ClO3-chlorate
ClO4-perchlorate
5.6 Naming Acids
Acids: compounds that produce H+ ions when dissolved in water (~ molecules with H+ attached to anions)
Rules for naming acids (depend on whether the anion contains oxygen)
- If the anion does not contain oxygen, the acid is named with the prefex hydro- and the suffix –ic attached to the root name for the element.
- HCl (hydrogen chloride), when dissolved in water forms hydrochloric acid
- HCN (hydrogen cyanide), when dissolved in water forms hydrocyanic acid
- H2S (hydrogen sulfide), when dissolved in water forms hydrosulfuric acid
- When the anion contains oxygen, the acid name is formed from the root name of the central element of the anion or the anion name, with a suffix of –ic or –ous. When the anion name ends in –ate, the suffix –ic is used; when the anion name ends in –ite, the suffix –ous is used.
- H2SO4SO42- sulfatesulfuric acid
- H3PO4PO43- phosphatephosphoric acid
- HC2H3O2C2H3O2- acetateacetic acid
- H2SO3SO32- sulfitesulfurous acid
- HNO2NO2- nitritenitrous acid
Acids: starts with H
Without oxygen:
HCl: hydrochloric acid
H2S: hydrosulfuric acid
With oxygen:
H2SO4: sulfate ion sulfuric acid;
H2SO3: sulfite ion sulfurous acid
Nomenclature practice
Write the names for these compounds.
- I2O7
- CO2
- CF4
- NH3
- PCl3
- PCl5
- P4O6
- SF6
- SO3
- SO2
- N2O3
- CO
- NO2
- SeF6
- SiO2
- H2O
- CuO
- SrO
- B2O3
- K2S
- AsF3
- Al2S3
- SnBr4
- CS2
- CdS
- AgCl
- KI
- NO
- P2O5
- FeCl3
- ClF3
- CuCl
- MnO2
- MgO
Naming Practice
- Ca(OH)2
- Na3PO4
- KMnO4
- (NH4)2Cr2O7
- Co(ClO4)2
- KClO3
- Cu(NO2)2
- PbCO3
- KHSO4
- NH4I
- NaCN
- H3PO3
- Na2CO3
- FeBr3
- HF
- CsClO4
- PCl3
- H2S
- CuSO4
- Ca(HCO3)2
- MgI2
- KMnO4
- HBrO4
- Fe(OH)2
- NaHCO3
- BaSO4
- HNO3
- BrF5
- NaBr
- Zn3(PO4)2
Naming Practice
- Fe2O3
- CsCl
- NaCN
- P2S3
- H2S
- Cu(NO3)2
- Ag2S
- SnBr4
- Ca3(PO4)2
- Ba(OH)2
- HF
- MgCO3
- PbO
- NH4NO3
- BaSO4
- Li2CO3
- H3PO4
- K2Cr2O7
- HNO3
- MnSO4
- Diboron trioxide
- Hydrochloric acid
- Calcium acetate (calcium ethanoate)
- Sodium hydroxide
- Copper (II) permanganate
- Aluminum phosphate
- Silicon dioxide
- Magnesium oxide
- Ammonium hydroxide
- Sodium carbonate
- Cobalt (III) nitrate
- Sulfuric acid
- Calcium chloride
- Lead (IV) oxide
- Dinitrogen pentoxide
- Silver chloride
- Iron (II) oxide
- Hydrosulfuric acid
- Ammonium sulfate
- Sulfur hexafluoride
Name Compound Types I, II, III and acids
- KClO3
- NaBr
- SrO
- B2O3
- HBr
- PbCO3
- NH4I
- H2SO4
- CuSO4
- Ca(HCO3)2
- MgI2
- BrF5
Write formulas from names
For ionic compounds, write ions with charges, then combine, using subscripts and parentheses as necessary.
- barium carbonate
- hydrochloric acid
- potassium hydroxide
- sodium carbonate
- cobalt (III) nitrate
- calcium chloride
- lead (IV) oxide
- dinitrogen pentoxide
- ammonium phosphate
- ammonium sulfate
- disulfur dichloride
- nitric acid
- lithium iodide
- aluminum oxide
- sodium nitrate
- ammonium hydroxide
- magnesium bromide
- carbon disulfide
- cobalt (II) chloride
- cesium fluoride
Nomenclature: Types I, II and IIIch 5
Write the names for the following compounds.
- KCl
- CO2
- CoCl3
- CaO
- PbBr4
- CO
- CsCl
- PCl5
- CuI2
- SF6
- Fe2O3
- PbS
- FeO
- SnBr4
- LiH
- SO3
- CaI
- NO
- KI
- P4O6
- NaF
- CuCl
- BaCl
- N2O3
- Al2S3
Nomenclaturech 5
Write the names for the following compounds.
- Ca(OH)2
- K2S
- MgO
- HBr
- P2O5
- NaCN
- NO
- FePO4
- HC2H3O2
- Al2S3
- PbBr4
- CuSO4
- HCl
- PCl3
- CuNO3
Write the chemical formulas. (For types I and II, write the ions with charges first, then combine)
- Sodium sulfide
- Nitrogen monoxide
- Dinitrogen trioxide
- Copper (II) chloride
- Aluminum bromide
- Iron (III) hydroxide
- Carbon tetrafluoride
- Potassium nitrate