WebAedhan • 9 yr. ago. -Ic acid refers only to the protonated acid, to use your example, clavulanic acid. The deprotonated form (i.e. COO-) can be referred to as clavulanate and a salt of this would be clavulanate, as can be seen in examples such as citric acid and sodium citrate. '-ate' can also be used in naming of esters. WebIDE, ITE and ATE rules and writing a chemical formula and when to use them. It's the starting point for writing chemical equations. Learn how to write chemi...
4.5: Nomenclature - Chemistry LibreTexts
WebSep 7, 2024 · What are the suffixes in chemistry? Most of them end in “-ate” or “-ite”. There are a few exceptions that end in “-ide” including hydroxide, peroxide, and cyanide. Hydro acids use the prefix “hydro-” and the suffix “-ic”. Oxoacids containing oxygen use the “-ous” or the “-ic” suffix. How do you know if it ends in ate ... WebWhen you have a polyatomic ion with one more oxygen than the "-ate" ion, then your acid will have the prefix "per-" and the suffix "-ic." For example, the chlorate ion is ClO 3-. … s cross white colour
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WebA few "-ite" and "-ate" pairs of ion exist (NO2^1- "nitrite" and NO3^1- "nitrate"). The ion in the pair with fewer oxygen atoms is always the "-ite" ion. The "-ate" ion always contains more oxygen atoms than the "-ite" ion. 3. Four of the polyatomic ions have names ending in "-ide" (OH^1- "hydroxide", O2^2- "peroxide", CN^1- "cyanide"). WebApr 20, 2011 · VIDEO Explanation of ATE Versus ITE on Polyatomic Ion Names In Group 1 and 2 of the polyatomic ions list we can notice that many of the polyatomic ions have a … Web-ide is typically nonmetal compoundes (sodium chlorIDE). -ate is an ion with the largest number of oxygen ions, while -ite is used for a smaller number of oxygen ions (NO2 = nitrite NO3 = Nitrate) For more fun, lets look at chloride: Cl = Chloride ClO = HYPOchlorITE ClO2 = chlorITE ClO3 = ChlorATE ClO4 = PERchlorATE EDIT: s cross width