Unit 0 Exam 1 Review Nomenclature: Covalent compounds Covalent compounds ● ● Between a nonmetal and a nonmetal Know the elements that are in covalent compounds: H, C, N, O, F Si, P, S, Cl Br I Know these 3 famous polyanions: ● ● ● SO4-2≡sulfate NO3-≡nitrate PO4-3≡phosphate Know how to name neutral compounds. AXBX ● A= say the name of the element with a prefix, if the number is greater than one. ● B= Add prefix and say the name of the element with a suffix of “-ide” Prefixes: ● ● ● ● ● 2≡di 3≡tri 4≡tetra 5≡pent 6≡hex Nomenclature of Ionic compounds Salts involve elements from opposite sides of the main group (AxBy) ● A = cation:written as the element’s name ● B = anion:written as the element’s name with the suffix “ide” x= # of cations y= # of anions ● - Group I, II, III are cations Like Na, Ca and Al ● Group V, VI, VII are anions Like N, O, and Cl Transfer the charges when writing the ionic formula *if they are the same charge drop the subscripts* Nomenclature of transition metals ● ● When writing the name of the compound include the charge of the transitional metal as a roman numeral When writing the formula transfer the charges of each element. Example: Iron (Ⅲ) oxide ● ● ● Means iron has a +3 charge Fe3+ and O2Fe2O3 Organic parent compounds Number of Carbons prefix Number of bonds 1 meth- 2 eth- 3 prop- 4 but- 5 pent- 6 hex- 7 hept 8 oct Suffix Single bond -ane Double bond -ene Triple bond -yne Atom structure Proton mass is 1 = amu ≈ 1 gram/mole. Charge is +1 Neutron mass is 1 amu ≈1 grams/mole. Charge is neutral Electron mass is 1/2000 of a g/mole. Charge is negative ● ● ● Protons = atomic number and is what determines the type of element. It Increases by 1 from 1 for H to 118 for Og on the periodic table Neutrons = determines the isotope of an element Electrons = balances charge of proton, also the key particle that creates chemical reactions to make different kinds of matter. MKS units Length Meters (m) Time Seconds (s) Mass Kilogram (kg) Energy Joules (J) Temperature Kelvin (K) Quantity of matter Mole (mol) Electric current Ampere (A) Scientific notation math Conversion of mks units 1min=60𝑠 212𝑔𝑟𝑎𝑚𝑠=0.212𝑘𝑔 550𝑐𝑚=5.5𝑚 Approximations ● a mathematical quantity that is close in value to but not the same as a desired quantity. Functional relationships Functions Equations Graphs Explanation Direct Proportional (Linear) y=mx+b As x increases y increases at the same rate. x ∝ y ● A = abc ● A ∝C Inverse Proportional (Reciprocal) y=1/x As x increases, y decreases. x∝ 1/y ● PV=nRT ● As P↑, V will↓ Quadratic or Parabola y=x^2 ● ● Rate = k[A]^2 As [A] increases rate increases as a rough square Functional relationships Functions Inverse square Equations y=1/x^2 Graphs Explanation ● ● ν= R(1/n1^2−1/n2^2) As n↑, ν decreases as a rough inverse square Logarithmic y =ln(x) Logarithmic functions are the inverses of exponential functions. Exponential y = 2^x An example of an exponential function is the growth of bacteria. Some bacteria double every hour. If you start with 1 bacterium and it doubles every hour, you will have 2x bacteria after x hours. This can be written as f(x) = 2x Periodic table Periodic table review ● ● Columns = groups = families. These elements share the same characteristics. Rows = periods Extracting information from the periodic table Atomic number = # of protons Atomic mass *Electron # = Protons, if the charge is neutral *Neutron #= mass number-proton number Valence electrons ● The group number tells tells you the number of valence electrons. Example: Oxygen is in group 16. - Group 16 has 6 valence electrons Types of reactions