Compounds (AQA GCSE Chemistry)
Revision Note
Forming compounds
What is a compound?
Elements take part in chemical reactions in which new substances are made in processes that most often involve an energy change
In these reactions atoms combine together in fixed ratios that will give them full outer shells of electrons, often producing compounds
A compound is a pure substance made up of two or more elements chemically combined and which cannot be separated by physical means
The properties of compounds are usually quite different from the elements that form them
There is an unlimited number of compounds, and the chemical formula is what tells you the ratio of atoms in a compound
For example, H2O is a compound containing 2 hydrogen atoms and 1 oxygen atom
The chemical formula can be deduced from the relative number of atoms present
For example, a molecule containing 3 atoms of hydrogen and 1 atom of nitrogen is NH3
Diagrams or models can also be used to represent the chemical formula
A molecule of ammonia
The ammonia molecule consists of a central nitrogen atom bonded to 3 hydrogen atoms
Examiner Tips and Tricks
A common error is to say elements are pure while compounds are impure. Pure substances contain only one element or compound and are not mixed with anything else e.g., water that contains H2O molecules only is pure whereas if salt is added it then becomes impure.
Naming compounds
How to name a compound
Naming compounds depends on what type of elements make up a compound
Metals and non-metals
Ionic compounds contain metal and non-metal elements joined together as particles called ions
The metal element’s symbol is always written first
The non-metal element always takes on the name ending ‘– ide’ unless oxygen is also present,
For example, PbS is called lead sulfide and MgCl2 is called magnesium chloride
When oxygen is present the name ending is usually ‘-ate’
For example, CuSO4 is copper sulphate, KClO3 is potassium chlorate and Na2CO3 is sodium carbonate
Some formula names are similar so be careful with spelling
For example, NaNO3 is sodium nitrate and NaNO2 is sodium nitrite
The ending ‘-ite’ will always have less oxygen than ‘-ate’
The number of oxygen atoms varies, so you cannot tell how many oxygen atoms are present from the name ending
Non-metal only compounds
Covalent compounds contain only non-metals
They are named using prefixes (mono, di, tri, tetra, penta) to show how many of each element is present in the formula
For example, CO2 is carbon dioxide, NO is nitrogen monoxide and SiCl4 is silicon tetrachloride
A few covalent compounds are known by their common names, and you are expected to learn them, for example:
H2SO4 is sulfuric acid
NH3 is ammonia
CH4 is methane
HCl is hydrochloric acid (or hydrogen chloride if it is a gas)
C2H5OH is ethanol
HNO3 is nitric acid
Examiner Tips and Tricks
Higher tier students should know the names of the HCl, H2SO4, HNO3 and C2H5OH.
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