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3: Chemical Nomenclature Practice

  • Page ID
    541639
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    • 3.1: Background - Naming Ionic Compounds
      This page explains the naming conventions for ionic compounds, which are made up of cations and anions. Cations from groups 1A, 2A, and 3A keep their elemental names while transition metals display their charge using Roman numerals. Anions typically end in "-ide," and polyatomic ions, which consist of covalently bonded atoms, have varying naming conventions that utilize prefixes and suffixes based on oxygen content, with modifications for hydrogen altering their charge.
    • 3.2: Background - Naming Bimolecular Covalent Compounds
      This page explains bimolecular covalent compounds made of two different nonmetals, focusing on their naming conventions which reflect the quantities of each atom using specific prefixes (mono- to deca-). It notes the order of naming based on electronegativity and gives examples. Additionally, it highlights that compounds consisting only of hydrogen and carbon, such as methane, use different naming rules, underscoring the distinctions in nomenclature.
    • 3.3: Activity 1 – Naming and Structure Determination Based on Compound Type
      This page contains the first data table students must complete for Nomenclature Practice.
    • 3.4: Activity 2 - Expanded Polyatomic Ions
      This page contains the second data table students must complete for Nomenclature Practice.


    This page titled 3: Chemical Nomenclature Practice is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Georgia Fritz.