Nomenclature Chemistry Unit Science 10. Nomenclature Ask yourself, “Is it binary or...

20
Nomenclature Chemistry Unit Science 10

description

Binary Compounds There are 2 types of binary compounds: –Binary ionic (a metal and a non-metal) –Binary covalent (2 non-metals)

Transcript of Nomenclature Chemistry Unit Science 10. Nomenclature Ask yourself, “Is it binary or...

Page 1: Nomenclature Chemistry Unit Science 10. Nomenclature Ask yourself, “Is it binary or polyatomic?”…

Nomenclature

Chemistry UnitScience 10

Page 2: Nomenclature Chemistry Unit Science 10. Nomenclature Ask yourself, “Is it binary or polyatomic?”…

Nomenclature

• Ask yourself, “Is it binary or polyatomic?”

• If it is binary, it is made up of 2 elements (straight from the periodic table).

• Ex: LiF, HCl, MgO, Mg3N2 , AlH3

• Only 2 element symbols in the formula

Page 3: Nomenclature Chemistry Unit Science 10. Nomenclature Ask yourself, “Is it binary or polyatomic?”…

Binary Compounds

• There are 2 types of binary compounds:

– Binary ionic (a metal and a non-metal)

– Binary covalent (2 non-metals)

Page 4: Nomenclature Chemistry Unit Science 10. Nomenclature Ask yourself, “Is it binary or polyatomic?”…

Type 1: Binary Ionic• To name a binary ionic compound:

• the metal always comes first.

• the non-metal’s ending gets changed to ide.

• if it is a transition metal you need to decide which charge it is.

• balance of total negative and positive charge.

(2 elements, 1 metal, 1 non-metal)

Page 5: Nomenclature Chemistry Unit Science 10. Nomenclature Ask yourself, “Is it binary or polyatomic?”…

Type 1: Binary Ionic• Going from formula to name is easy!

e.g. LiF: Lithium + Fluorine

Lithium Fluorine Lithium Fluor Lithium Fluoride

This compound’s name is Lithium Fluoride

(2 elements, 1 metal, 1 non-metal)

drop the non-metals ending and replace with the appropriate ending… which is?

…Write metal first, non-metal second

Page 6: Nomenclature Chemistry Unit Science 10. Nomenclature Ask yourself, “Is it binary or polyatomic?”…

Type 1: Binary Ionic

• Going from name to formula requires you to balance the charges of your ions…

e.g. Beryllium Hydride: Beryllium + Hydrogen

So the formula would be BeH2

(2 elements, 1 metal, 1 non-metal)

Beryllium will give one of its electrons to the hydrogen, but it is still not balanced…

Now that all the elements are in their most stableforms (balanced), we can write the formula…

H ·· Be · · H

Page 7: Nomenclature Chemistry Unit Science 10. Nomenclature Ask yourself, “Is it binary or polyatomic?”…

Type 1: Binary Ionic: Transition Metals

• Transition metals: Check your periodic table of ions to see what the charges of each Transition metal has.

• Balance charges on metal and non metal as per usual

(2 elements, 1 metal, 1 non-metal)

Page 8: Nomenclature Chemistry Unit Science 10. Nomenclature Ask yourself, “Is it binary or polyatomic?”…

Type 1: Binary Ionic: Transition Metals

• Ex: Iron (II) sulphide Fe 2+ + S 2-

FeS

• Ex2: AuF3

So which gold will fit with our equation? Au(I) or Au(III) are the two different charges of gold

Will Au+ + F- or Au3+ + F+ give AuF3 - use your lewis transfer diagrams to decide

(2 elements, 1 metal, 1 non-metal)

Iron (II) has a 2+ charge whereas

Iron (III) has a 3+ charge

Au (I) has a 1+ charge whereas

Au (III) has a 3+ charge

THE ONLY DIFFERENCE WITH

TRANSITION METALS

TO OUR OTHER BINARY IONIC COMPOUNDS

IS THAT THEY CAN HAVE

MORE THAN 1 CHARGE

WE DO THEM THE EXACT SAME

Page 9: Nomenclature Chemistry Unit Science 10. Nomenclature Ask yourself, “Is it binary or polyatomic?”…

Type 2: Binary Covalent

• To name a binary covalent compound:• use prefixes to indicate how many of each

there are.» Prefixes: mono, di, tri, tetra, penta, hexa,

hepta, octa, nona, deca.• also ends in ide.• balance using valence numbers (groups)

(2 elements, both non-metals)

Page 10: Nomenclature Chemistry Unit Science 10. Nomenclature Ask yourself, “Is it binary or polyatomic?”…

Type 2: Binary Covalent

• To go from formula to name:

e.g. HCl - 1 Hydrogen, 1 Chlorine

The first element doesn’t get the mono prefix if it is just one. It does only if its more than one.

Hydrogen monochloride

(2 elements, both non-metals)

Page 11: Nomenclature Chemistry Unit Science 10. Nomenclature Ask yourself, “Is it binary or polyatomic?”…

Type 2: Binary Covalent

e.g. N2O3 - 2 Nitrogen + 3 Oxygen

• prefixes: 2 nitrogen = di, 3 oxygen = tri• oxygen becomes oxide

So the name becomes: Dinitrogen trioxide

(2 elements, both non-metals)

Page 12: Nomenclature Chemistry Unit Science 10. Nomenclature Ask yourself, “Is it binary or polyatomic?”…

Type 2: Binary Covalent

• Going from name to formula is just as easy with covalent compounds, since the name tells you how many of each you have

• e.g. nitrogen trichloride = NCl3 tetraphosphorus hexaoxide = P4O6

dinitrogen pentoxide = N2O5

sulfur hexafluoride = SF6

(2 elements, both non-metals)

It’s just that simple!!!

Page 13: Nomenclature Chemistry Unit Science 10. Nomenclature Ask yourself, “Is it binary or polyatomic?”…

Polyatomic

• What does it mean to be polyatomic?More than 2 elements in a compound.

• You will find examples of these on the back of your periodic tables.

Page 14: Nomenclature Chemistry Unit Science 10. Nomenclature Ask yourself, “Is it binary or polyatomic?”…

Naming Polyatomic Compounds

THEY ACT THE EXACT SAME AS YOUR BINARY IONIC COMPOUNDS

• these do not end in ide *most end in ate or ite.

• you decide on how many of each by balancing positive and negative charges (these compounds typically exist as ions)

the same as your binary ionic compounds are balanced

• if there is more than one of the polyatomic ion, it must be written in brackets with the subscript outside the bracket

• Polyatomic ions do not use prefixes

Page 15: Nomenclature Chemistry Unit Science 10. Nomenclature Ask yourself, “Is it binary or polyatomic?”…

Naming Polyatomic Compounds

• e.g. Li2SO4

SO4 is an ion with a -2 charge, so it wants to gain two electrons to get its -2 charge. It will take one electrons from each of the 2 lithium allowing them to form an ionic bond.

• e.g. Ca(NO3)2 so we have 2 NO3’s

NO3 has a -1 charge, so it wants 1 electron, but calcium has 2 to give up so we need two NO3 to balance the formula.

Page 16: Nomenclature Chemistry Unit Science 10. Nomenclature Ask yourself, “Is it binary or polyatomic?”…

Polyatomic Ions: the Ate or the Ite

• note that the ending of polyatomic ions depends on how many O’s there are

• more O’s is ate.• fewer O’s is ite.

• e.g. SO4-2 sulfate – 4 O’s

SO3

-2 sulfite – 3 O’s

Page 17: Nomenclature Chemistry Unit Science 10. Nomenclature Ask yourself, “Is it binary or polyatomic?”…

Writing Polyatomic IonsGroup 17 (Halogens)

• these can all form 4 different ions when they bond with oxygen.

• named according to how many O…

FO FO2

FO3

FO4

}} ite because they have fewer O

ate because they have more O

Page 18: Nomenclature Chemistry Unit Science 10. Nomenclature Ask yourself, “Is it binary or polyatomic?”…

Writing Polyatomic IonsGroup 17 (Halogens)

• these can all form 4 different ions when they bond with oxygen.

• named according to how many O…

FO > hypofluorite > even fewer OFO2 > fluorite

FO3 > fluorate FO4 > perfluorate > even more O

Page 19: Nomenclature Chemistry Unit Science 10. Nomenclature Ask yourself, “Is it binary or polyatomic?”…

So what am I looking for?• When given a formula or name of a compound how will I

know if it is Binary Ionic, Binary Covalent, or Polyatomic?

• If the formula/name begins with a metal, you know right away that you are dealing with ions and must balance charges (Binary Ionic, or Polyatomic with metals).

• If you see prefixes like di or tri in the name you know it is Binary Covalent (since both ionic and polyatomic do not use prefixes)

• The first thing you should always check for is to see how many elements you have. If you have more than 2 elements, for the purposes of grade 10 science, you will be dealing with polyatomic ions.

Page 20: Nomenclature Chemistry Unit Science 10. Nomenclature Ask yourself, “Is it binary or polyatomic?”…

Examples• Sodium phosphide

• We have a metal (Na+) and a non-metal (P3-).• So we need to balance the equation (Need 3 sodiums to

balance out the 3- charge of the P• so the formula becomes Na3P

• Dinitrogen pentoxide.• Due to prefixes, this is covalent so the formula is written

N2O5.

• Titanium (IV) bromate• Titanium (a metal) and bromate (a polyatomic)• Ti4+ and BrO3

- • Formula: Ti(BrO3)4