Formulas and Nomenclature of Ionic and Covalent Compounds: Contents
Formulas and Nomenclature of Ionic and Covalent Compounds: Contents
Formulas and Nomenclature of Ionic and Covalent Compounds: Contents
MAIN General
Contents:
Types of Compounds
Types of Ions:
Main-Group Metals (Groups IA, IIA, and IIIA)
Transition (B-group) and Post-Transition (Group IVA and VA) Metals
Main-Group Nonmetals (Groups IVA, VA, VIA, and VIIA)
Polyatomic Ions
Writing Formulas of Ionic Compounds
Nomenclature of Ionic and Covalent Compounds
1. Binary Ionic Compounds Containing a Metal and a Nonmetal
2. Ionic Compounds Containing a Metal and a Polyatomic Ion
3. Acids and Acid Salts
4. Binary Covalent Compounds Between Two Nonmetals
5. Hydrocarbons
Molecular Masses from Chemical Formulas
References
Types of Compounds
Ionic compounds are compounds composed of ions, charged particles that form when an atom
(or group of atoms, in the case of polyatomic ions) gains or loses electrons.
Types of Ions:
Group IA, IIA, and IIIA metals tend to form cations by losing all of their outermost (valence)
electrons. The charge on the cation is the same as the group number. The cation is given the
same name as the neutral metal atom.
Many of these ions have common or trivial names formed from the stem of the element
name (the Latin name in some cases) plus the ending -ic or -ous. (-ic endings go with the
higher possible charge, -ous endings go with the lower possible charge).
The systematic names (also known as the Stock system) for these ions are derived by
naming the metal first, followed in parentheses by the charge written in Roman numerals.
For the metals below that typically form only one charge, it is not usually necessary to
specify the charge in the compound name.
For example, iron can form two possible ions, 2+ and 3+. The Fe2+ ion is known as the
ferrous ion (common) or the iron(II) ion (systematic); the Fe3+ ion is known as the ferric
ion (common) or the iron(III) ion (systematic).
The mercury(I) cation is a special case; it consists of two Hg+ ions joined together, and so is
always found as Hg22+. (Hence, mercury(I) chloride is Hg2Cl2, not HgCl, while mercury (II)
chloride is HgCl2.)
Ions of Some Transition Metals and Post-Transition Metals (Groups IVA and VA)
Group IVA, VA, VIA, and VIIA nonmetals tend to form anions by gaining enough electrons to
fill their valence shell with eight electrons. The charge on the anion is the group number minus
eight. The anion is named by taking the element stem name and adding the ending -ide.
Polyatomic Ions
Polyatomic ions are ions that are composed of two or more atoms that are linked by covalent
bonds, but that still have a net deficiency or surplus of electrons, resulting in an overall charge on
the group.
Formula Name
NH4+ ammonium
H3O+ hydronium
OH- hydroxide
CN- cyanide
O22- peroxide
N3- azide
NO2- nitrite
NO3- nitrate
ClO- hypochlorite
ClO2- chlorite
ClO3- chlorate
ClO4- perchlorate
MnO4- permanganate
C2H3O2- acetate (OAc-)
C2O42- oxalate
CO32- carbonate
OCN- cyanate
SCN- thiocyanate
S2O32- thiosulfate
CrO42- chromate
Cr2O72- dichromate
SO42- sulfate
SO32- sulfite
PO43- phosphate
PO43- monohydrogen phosphate
PO43- dihydrogen phosphate
HCO3- hydrogen carbonate (bicarbonate)
HSO4- hydrogen sulfate (bisulfate)
HSO3- hydrogen sulfite (bisulfite)
There are some regularities in the names of these polyatomic ions.
Replacing the first element in the formula with another element from the same group
gives a polyatomic ion with the same charge, and a similar name:
* But note that nitrogen does not follow this pattern (i.e., nitrate, NO3-)
Some nonmetals form a series of polyatomic ions with oxygen (all having the same
charge): ClO-, hypochlorite; ClO2-, chlorite; ClO3-, chlorate; ClO4-, perchlorate.
The -ate forms (formula and charge) must be memorized. In some cases, the -
ate form has three oxygens, and in some cases four oxygens. The charge is the
same for the entire series.
The -ite form has one less oxygen that the -ate form.
The hypo- stem -ite form has two less oxygens than the -ate form.
The per- stem -ate form has one more oxygen than the -ate form.
The -ide form is the monatomic anion (see Main-Group Nonmetals)
The general rules for such series are summarized in the table below:
Formula Name
XOny- stem + -ate
XOn-1y- stem + -ite
XOn-2y- hypo- + stem + -ite
XOn+1y- per- + stem + -ate
Xy- stem + -ide
Examples
SO42- sulfate
SO32- sulfite
SO22- hyposulfite
SO52- persulfate
S2- sulfide
Examples
Cation Anion Formula
Na+ Cl- NaCl
Ca2+ Br- CaBr2
Na+ S2- Na2S
Mg2+ O2- MgO
Fe3+ O2- Fe2O3
Na+ SO42- Na2SO4
Mg2+ NO3- Mg(NO3)2
NH4+ SO42- (NH4)2SO4
Nomenclature of Ionic and Covalent Compounds
A binary compound is a compound formed from two different elements. There may or may not
be more than one of each element. A diatomic compound (or diatomic molecule) contains two
atoms, which may or may not be the same.
Cl2 Not binary (only one type of atom), but diatomic (two atoms)
BrCl Binary (two different elements), and diatomic (two atoms)
H2O Binary (two different elements), but not diatomic (more than two atoms)
CH4 Binary (two different elements), but not diatomic (more than two atoms)
CHCl3 Neither binary nor diatomic
Do NOT use prefixes to indicate how many of each element is present; this information is
implied in the name of the compound.
Examples
NaCl Sodium chloride
AlBr3 Aluminum bromide
Ca3P2 Calcium phosphide
SrI2 Strontium iodide
Iron(II) chloride or ferrous chloride
FeCl2 The cation charge must be specified
since iron can form more than one charge.
Metals combine with polyatomic ions to give ionic compounds. Name the cation first (specifying
the charge, if necessary), then the polyatomic ion as listed in the table above (or as derived from
the rules which were given).
Do NOT use prefixes to indicate how many of each element is present; this information is
implied in the name of the compound.
Examples
NaOH Sodium hydroxide
Ca(NO3)2 Calcium nitrate
K3PO4 Potassium phosphate
(NH4)2SO4 Ammonium sulfate
NH4F Ammonium fluoride
CaCO3 Calcium carbonate
Mg(C2H3O2)2 Magnesium acetate
Fe(OH)3 Iron(III) hydroxide or ferrous hydroxide
Cr3(PO4)2 Chromium(II) phosphate
CrPO4 Chromium(III) phosphate
NaHCO3 Sodium hydrogen carbonate or sodium bicarbonate
Acids are compounds in which the "cation" is H+. (These are not really ionic compounds, but
we'll get into that later.) These can be named as compounds as in the previous cases, e.g., HCl is
"hydrogen chloride", but are more frequently given special "acid names" (especially when
dissolved in water, which is most frequently the case.) The word "hydrogen" is omitted, the word
"acid" is added to the end; the suffix is changed as shown below:
Examples
Example Compound Name Acid name
HClO3 hydrogen chlorate chloric acid
H2SO4 hydrogen sulfate sulfuric acid
HClO2 hydrogen chlorite chlorous acid
HCl hydrogen chloride hydrochloric acid
Acid salts are ionic compounds that still contain an acidic hydrogen, such as NaHSO4. In naming
these salts, specify the number of acidic hydrogens in the salt. For instance:
Examples
NaHSO4 sodium hydrogen sulfate
NaH2PO4 sodium dihydrogen phosphate
Na2HPO4 sodium hydrogen phosphate
NaHCO3 sodium hydrogen carbonate or sodium bicarbonate
The prefix bi- implies an acidic hydrogen: thus, NaHCO3 is sodium bicarbonate (or sodium
hydrogen carbonate); NaHSO3 is sodium bisulfite (or sodium hydrogen sulfite), etc.
In many cases, two elements can combine in several different ways to make completely different
compounds. (This cannot happen with ionic compounds, except in the cases of metals that can
form more than one charge.) For instance, carbon can share electrons with one oxygen to make
CO (carbon monoxide), or with two oxygens to make CO2 (carbon dioxide). For this reason, it is
necessary to specify how many of each element is present within the compound.
The formula is written with the more electropositive element (the one further to
the left on the periodic table) placed first, then the more electronegative element
(the one further to the right on the periodic table).
[Important exception: when the compound contains oxygen and a halogen, the halogen is placed
first. If both elements are in the same group, the one with the higher period number is named
first.]
The first element in the formula is given the neutral element name, and the second
one is named by replacing the ending of the neutral element name with -ide. A
prefix is used in front of each element name to indicate how many atoms of that
element are present:
1 mono-
2 di-
3 tri-
4 tetra-
5 penta-
6 hexa-
7 hepta-
8 octa-
9 nona-
10 deca-
If there is only one of the first element in the formula, the mono- prefix is
dropped.
Examples
SO2 sulfur dioxide
SO3 sulfur trioxide
N2O dinitrogen monoxide
NO nitrogen monoxide
NO2 nitrogen dioxide
N2O4 dinitrogen tetroxide
N2O5 dinitrogen pentoxide
5. Hydrocarbons.
Hydrocarbons contain only carbon and hydrogen, and are the simplest type of organic
compound (a compound containing carbon).
Alkanes contain only carbon-carbon single bonds, and are the simplest of the hydrocarbons.
The simplest of the alkanes are the straight-chain alkanes, in which all of the carbon atoms are
linked together in a line, with no branches. (They don't get simpler than that!)
Alkanes have the general formula CnH2n+2, and are the constituents of several important fuels,
such as natural gas and gasoline.
CH4 methane
C2H6 ethane
C3H8 propane
C4H10 butane
C5H12 pentane
C6H14 hexane
C7H16 heptane
C8H18 octane
C9H20 nonane
C10H22 decane
(Because of the tremendous variety of possible organic compounds [over six million, and still
counting], the rules for naming structures more complex than the staight-chain alkanes
are muchmore elaborate than those that those we've seen so far, but those rules will be discussed
when you take organic chemistry.)
For ionic compounds, the term formula mass or formula weight is used instead, since there
aren't really any molecules present.
The molecular/formula mass is numerically equal to the mass of one mole of the substance.
For example, the molecular weight of water would be obtained by the following process:
References
John McMurry and Robert C. Fay, Chemistry, 4th ed. Upper Saddle River, NJ:
Pearson/Prentice Hall, 2004, p. 56-63.