The formula of the given compounds are to be written. Concept Information: Transition metals have the ability to form more than one positive ion and two ionic compounds with given non-metals. Stock system is the method for naming the metal ions that have more than one oxidation state in compounds indicated by Roman numeral in parenthesis just after the name of the metal ion. For naming of ionic compounds containing polyatomic ions, the name of the metal (cation) or a polyatomic cation written first, followed by the name of anion, this can be non-metal, and it this is non-metal (anion), change the suffix of non-metal to - i d e , adding at the end of the anion, that is in case of monatomic ions. The hydroxide ion and cynide ion are the exceptions. Rules of naming molecular compounds: Replace the ending of the second element with “ide”. While naming molecular compounds prefixes are used to indicate the number of a given element present in the compound like ” mono-” indicates one, “di-” indicates two, “tri-” is three, “tetra-” is four, “penta-” is five, and “hexa-” is six, “hepta-” is seven, “octo-” is eight, “nona-” is nine, and “deca” is ten.
The formula of the given compounds are to be written. Concept Information: Transition metals have the ability to form more than one positive ion and two ionic compounds with given non-metals. Stock system is the method for naming the metal ions that have more than one oxidation state in compounds indicated by Roman numeral in parenthesis just after the name of the metal ion. For naming of ionic compounds containing polyatomic ions, the name of the metal (cation) or a polyatomic cation written first, followed by the name of anion, this can be non-metal, and it this is non-metal (anion), change the suffix of non-metal to - i d e , adding at the end of the anion, that is in case of monatomic ions. The hydroxide ion and cynide ion are the exceptions. Rules of naming molecular compounds: Replace the ending of the second element with “ide”. While naming molecular compounds prefixes are used to indicate the number of a given element present in the compound like ” mono-” indicates one, “di-” indicates two, “tri-” is three, “tetra-” is four, “penta-” is five, and “hexa-” is six, “hepta-” is seven, “octo-” is eight, “nona-” is nine, and “deca” is ten.
Solution Summary: The author explains the stock system for naming metal ions with more than one oxidation state in compounds indicated by Roman numeral in parenthesis.
Definition Definition Elements containing partially filled d-subshell in their ground state configuration. Elements in the d-block of the periodic table receive the last or valence electron in the d-orbital. The groups from IIIB to VIIIB and IB to IIB comprise the d-block elements.
Chapter 2, Problem 109RQ
Interpretation Introduction
Interpretation:
The formula of the given compounds are to be written.
Concept Information:
Transition metals have the ability to form more than one positive ion and two ionic compounds with given non-metals.
Stock system is the method for naming the metal ions that have more than one oxidation state in compounds indicated by Roman numeral in parenthesis just after the name of the metal ion.
For naming of ionic compounds containing polyatomic ions, the name of the metal (cation) or a polyatomic cation written first, followed by the name of anion, this can be non-metal, and it this is non-metal (anion), change the suffix of non-metal to -ide, adding at the end of the anion, that is in case of monatomic ions. The hydroxide ion and cynide ion are the exceptions.
Rules of naming molecular compounds:
Replace the ending of the second element with “ide”.
While naming molecular compounds prefixes are used to indicate the number of a given element present in the compound like ” mono-” indicates one, “di-” indicates two, “tri-” is three, “tetra-” is four, “penta-” is five, and “hexa-” is six, “hepta-” is seven, “octo-” is eight, “nona-” is nine, and “deca” is ten.
2H2S(g)+3O2(g)→2SO2(g)+2H2O(g)
A 1.2mol sample of H2S(g) is combined with excess O2(g), and the reaction goes to completion.
Question
Which of the following predicts the theoretical yield of SO2(g) from the reaction?
Responses
1.2 g
Answer A: 1.2 grams
A
41 g
Answer B: 41 grams
B
77 g
Answer C: 77 grams
C
154 g
Answer D: 154 grams
D
Part VII. Below are the 'HNMR, 13 C-NMR, COSY 2D- NMR, and HSQC 2D-NMR (similar with HETCOR but axes are reversed) spectra of an
organic compound with molecular formula C6H1003 - Assign chemical shift values to the H and c atoms of the
compound. Find the structure. Show complete solutions.
Predicted 1H NMR Spectrum
4.7 4.6 4.5 4.4 4.3 4.2 4.1 4.0 3.9 3.8 3.7 3.6 3.5 3.4 3.3 3.2 3.1 3.0 2.9 2.8 2.7 2.6 2.5 2.4 2.3 2.2 2.1 2.0 1.9 1.8 1.7 1.6 1.5 1.4 1.3 1.2 1.1
f1 (ppm)
Predicted 13C NMR Spectrum
100
f1 (ppm)
30
220 210 200 190 180
170
160 150 140 130 120
110
90
80
70
-26
60
50
40
46
30
20
115
10
1.0 0.9 0.8
0
-10