1 / 6

Writing formulas

Writing formulas. Look at first name. If it is ammonium, put NH 4 in parentheses and label it with a charge of +1 If it is mercury I, put the Hg 2 in parentheses and label it with a charge of +2

clio
Download Presentation

Writing formulas

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Writing formulas

  2. Look at first name • If it is ammonium, put NH4 in parentheses and label it with a charge of +1 • If it is mercury I, put the Hg2 in parentheses and label it with a charge of +2 • If it is a metal, write the symbol with charge labeled. Note, if a roman numeral follows the metal name, that is the charge. • If it is a nonmetal, put its symbol. If there is a prefix, put the corresponding number as a subscript.

  3. Look at second name • If it is a nonmetal, write its symbol with its charge labeled. • If it is a polyatomic anion, put its formula in parentheses and label it with its charge. • If it is a nonmetal, put its symbol. If there is a prefix, put the corresponding number as a subscript. Note, do not put a 1 as a subscript.

  4. Finalizing • If your name is two nonmetals, you are finished. • If you have charges, crisscross them to get subscripts. • Make sure your subscripts go outside of parentheses • Make sure you reduce the subscripts to their lowest ratio

  5. Hints • You only need to put parentheses around polyatomic ions if there is to be a subscript outside them. However, it is not wrong to always put polyatomics in parentheses. • Na(OH) or NaOH • Ca(OH)2, but not CaOH2 • If the charges balance out, then no subscripts are necessary. • Na+1 NO3-1 becomes simply NaNO3 • Mg+2 and O-2 becomes simply MgO

  6. Examples • Sodium chloride Na+1 Cl -1 NaCl • Sodium nitrate Na+1 (NO3) -1 NaNO3 • Sodium sulfate Na+1 (SO4) -2 Na2SO4 • Ammonium sulfate (NH4)+1 (SO4) -2 (NH4)2(SO4) • Lead II iodide Pb+2 I -1 PbI2 • Lead II nitrate Pb+2 (NO3)-1 Pb(NO3)2 • Lead IV oxide Pb+4 O -2 Pb2O4 PbO2 • Dinitrogen pentoxide N2O5 • Aluminum oxide Al+3 O-2 Al2O3

More Related