MHS Chemistry
Nomenclature Flow Chart
These eight steps will allow you to officially name every compound except organic compounds (which we'll get to another day) and acids (which we'll also get to another day). For each rule, the corresponding steps are shown for three examples.
Fe2S3 | BaCl2 | N2O5 | ||
1. | Write down the name of the positive ion ("cation"). | iron | barium | nitrogen |
2. | Write down the name of the negative ion ("anion"). | iron sulfide | barium chloride | nitrogen oxide |
3. | Check the periodic table. If the cation is has only one possible oxidation number, STOP | (nope) | barium chloride | (nope) |
4. | Look up the charge of the anion. | 2– | 2– | |
5. | Multiply the anion charge by the anion subscript to get the total negative charge. | (2-)x(3) = 6– | (2-)x(5) = 10– | |
6. | The total positive charge is opposite the total negative charge. | 6+ | 10+ | |
7. | Divide the total positive charge by the cation subscript to get the positive charge on each cation. | (6+)/÷2 = 3+ | (10+)÷2 = 5+ | |
8. | Write the charge for each cation atom in roman numerals in parentheses. | iron (III) sulfide | nitrogen (V) oxide |
That wasn't so bad, was it?