Binary molecular (covalent) compounds
Binary molecular (covalent) compounds are formed as the result of a reaction between two nonmetals. Although there are no ions in these compounds, they are named in a similar manner to binary ionic compounds. The nomenclature of binary covalent compounds follows these rules:
- The first element in the formula is given first, using the element’s full name.
- The second element is named as if it were an anion.
- Prefixes are used to denote the numbers of atoms present. If the first element exists as a single atom, the prefix mono- is omitted. For example, CO is called carbon monoxide rather than monocarbon monoxide.
These examples show how the rules are applied for the covalent compounds formed by nitrogen and oxygen:
compound | systematic name | common name |
---|---|---|
N2O | dinitrogen monoxide | nitrous oxide (laughing gas) |
NO | nitrogen monoxide | nitric oxide |
NO2 | nitrogen dioxide | |
N2O3 | dinitrogen trioxide | |
N2O4 | dinitrogen tetroxide | |
N2O5 | dinitrogen pentoxide |
To avoid awkward pronunciations, the final o or a of the prefix is often dropped when the element name begins with a vowel. For example, N2O4 is referred to as dinitrogen tetroxide, not dinitrogen tetraoxide, and CO is called carbon monoxide, not carbon monooxide.
Prefixes used in chemical nomenclature | |
---|---|
prefix | number of atoms |
mono- | 1 |
di- | 2 |
tri- | 3 |
tetra- | 4 |
penta- | 5 |
hexa- | 6 |
hepta- | 7 |
octa- | 8 |
Nonbinary compounds
Ionic compounds containing polyatomic ions
A special type of ionic compound is exemplified by ammonium nitrate (NH4NO3), which contains two polyatomic ions, NH4+ and NO3−. As the name suggests, a polyatomic ion is a charged entity composed of several atoms bound together. Polyatomic ions have special names that are used in the nomenclature of the compounds containing them.
Common polyatomic ions | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
*Bisulfate and **bicarbonate are widely used common names for hydrogen sulfate and hydrogen carbonate, respectively. | ||||
ion | name | ion | name | |
NH4+ | ammonium | CO32− | carbonate | |
NO2− | nitrite | HCO3− | hydrogen carbonate** | |
NO3− | nitrate | ClO− | hypochlorite | |
SO32− | sulfite | ClO2− | chlorite | |
SO42− | sulfate | ClO3− | chlorate | |
HSO4− | hydrogen sulfate* | ClO4− | perchlorate | |
OH− | hydroxide | C2H3O2− | acetate | |
CN− | cyanide | MnO4− | permanganate | |
PO43− | phosphate | Cr2O72− | dichromate | |
HPO42− | hydrogen phosphate | CrO42− | chromate | |
H2PO4− | dihydrogen phosphate | O22− | peroxide |
Several series of polyatomic anions exist that contain an atom of a given element in combination with different numbers of oxygen atoms. Such anions are called oxy anions. When the series contains only two members, the name of the ion with fewer oxygen atoms ends in -ite, and the name of the other ion ends in -ate. For example, SO32− is called sulfite and SO42− is called sulfate. In those cases where more than two oxy anions constitute the series, hypo- (less than) and per- (more than) are used as prefixes to name the members of the series with the smallest and the largest number of oxygen atoms, respectively. The chlorine-containing oxy anions provide an example:
ClO− | hypochlorite | |
ClO2− | chlorite | |
ClO3− | chlorate | |
ClO4− | perchlorate |
Naming ionic compounds that contain polyatomic ions is similar to naming binary ionic compounds. For example, the compound NaOH is called sodium hydroxide, because it contains the Na+ (sodium) cation and the OH− (hydroxide) anion. As in binary ionic compounds, when a metal that can form multiple cations is present, a Roman numeral is required to specify the charge on the cation. For example, the compound FeSO4 is called iron(II) sulfate, because it contains Fe2+.
Acids
An acid can be thought of as a molecule containing at least one hydrogen cation (H+) attached to an anion. The nomenclature of acids depends on whether the anion contains oxygen. If the anion does not contain oxygen, the acid is named with the prefix hydro- and the suffix -ic. For example, HCl dissolved in water is called hydrochloric acid. Likewise, HCN and H2S dissolved in water are called hydrocyanic and hydrosulfuric acids, respectively.
If the anion of the acid contains oxygen, the name is formed by adding the suffix -ic or -ous to the root name of the anion. If the anion name ends in -ate, the -ate is replaced by -ic (or sometimes -ric). For example, H2SO4 contains the sulfate anion (SO42−) and is called sulfuric acid; H3PO4 contains the phosphate anion (PO43−) and is called phosphoric acid; and HC2H3O2, which contains the acetate ion (C2H3O2−), is called acetic acid. For anions with an -ite ending, the -ite is replaced by -ous in naming the acid. For example, H2SO3, which contains sulfite (SO32−), is called sulfurous acid; and HNO2, which contains nitrite (NO2−), is named nitrous acid. The acids of the oxy anions of chlorine are used here to illustrate the rules for naming acids with oxygen-containing cations.
Names of less common acids | |
---|---|
*Often called boric acid. **Often called phosphoric acid. | |
formula | name |
H3BO3 | orthoboric acid* |
H2CO3 | carbonic acid |
H3PO4 | orthophosphoric acid** |
H4P2O7 | pyrophosphoric acid |
H5P3O10 | triphosphoric acid |
(HPO3)n | metaphosphoric acid |
(HPO3)3 | trimetaphosphoric acid |
H3PO3 | phosphorous acid |
H3PO2 | hypophosphorous acid |
H2SO5 | peroxosulfuric acid |
H2S2O6 | dithionic acid |
H2S2O3 | thiosulfuric acid |
HMnO4 | permanganic acid |
Names of common acids | |
---|---|
formula | name |
HF | hydrofluoric acid |
HCl | hydrochloric acid |
HBr | hydrobromic acid |
HI | hydroiodic acid |
HCN | hydrocyanic acid |
H2S | hydrosulfuric acid |
HNO3 | nitric acid |
HNO2 | nitrous acid |
H2SO4 | sulfuric acid |
H2SO3 | sulfurous acid |
HC2H3O2 | acetic acid |
acid formula | anion | name |
---|---|---|
HClO4 | perchlorate | perchloric acid |
HClO3 | chlorate | chloric acid |
HClO2 | chlorite | chlorous acid |
HClO | hypochlorite | hypochlorous acid |
Compounds with complex ions
A coordination compound is composed of one or more complex structural units, each of which has a central atom bound directly to a surrounding set of groups called ligands. The nomenclature of coordination compounds is based on these structural relationships.
Steven S. ZumdahlOrganic compounds
In general, organic compounds are substances that contain carbon (C), and carbon atoms provide the key structural framework that generates the vast diversity of organic compounds. All things on the Earth (and most likely elsewhere in the universe) that can be described as living have a crucial dependence on organic compounds. Foodstuffs—namely, fats, proteins, and carbohydrates—are organic compounds, as are such vital substances as hemoglobin, chlorophyll, enzymes, hormones, and vitamins. Other materials that add to the comfort, health, or convenience of humans are composed of organic compounds, including clothing made of cotton, wool, silk, and synthetic fibres; common fuels, such as wood, coal, petroleum, and natural gas; components of protective coatings, such as varnishes, paints, lacquers, and enamels; antibiotics and synthetic drugs; natural and synthetic rubber; dyes; plastics; and pesticides.
Historical developments
When chemistry took on many of the characteristics of a rational science at the end of the 18th century, there was general agreement that experiment could reveal the laws that governed the chemistry of inanimate, inorganic compounds. The compounds that could be isolated from living organic entities, however, appeared to have compositions and properties entirely different from inorganic ones. Very few of the concepts that enabled chemists to understand and manipulate the chemistry of inorganic compounds were applicable to organic compounds. This great difference in chemical behaviour between the two classes of compounds was thought to be intimately related to their origin. Inorganic substances could be extracted from the rocks, sediments, or waters of the Earth, whereas organic substances were found only in the tissues or remains of living organisms. It was therefore suspected that organic compounds could be produced only by organisms under the guidance of a power present exclusively in living things. This power was referred to as a vital force.
This vital force was thought to be a property inherent to all organic substances and incapable of being measured or extracted by chemical operations. Thus, most chemists of the time believed that it was impossible to produce organic substances entirely from inorganic ones. By about the middle of the 19th century, however, several simple organic compounds had been produced by the reaction of purely inorganic materials, and the unique character of organic compounds was recognized as the consequence of an intricate molecular architecture rather than of an intangible vital force.
The first significant synthesis of an organic compound from inorganic materials was an accidental discovery of Friedrich Wöhler, a German chemist. Working in Berlin in 1828, Wöhler mixed two salts (silver cyanate and ammonium chloride) in an attempt to make the inorganic substance ammonium cyanate. To his complete surprise, he obtained a product that had the same molecular formula as ammonium cyanate but was instead the well-known organic compound urea. From this serendipitous result, Wöhler correctly concluded that atoms could arrange themselves into molecules in different ways, and the properties of the resulting molecules were critically dependent on the molecular architecture. (The inorganic compound ammonium cyanate is now known to be an isomer of urea; both contain the same type and number of atoms but in different structural arrangements.) Encouraged by Wöhler’s discovery, others succeeded in making simple organic compounds from inorganic ones, and by roughly 1860 it was generally recognized that a vital force was unnecessary for the synthesis and interconversion of organic compounds.
Although a large number of organic compounds have since been synthesized, the structural complexity of certain compounds continues to pose major problems for the laboratory synthesis of complicated molecules. But modern spectroscopic techniques allow chemists to determine the specific architecture of complicated organic molecules, and molecular properties can be correlated with carbon bonding patterns and characteristic structural features known as functional groups.