Chemistry: naming inorganic acids
Tutoring chemistry, you encounter acids. The chemistry tutor shares some observations about how to name them.
New students to the acid-and-base topic hear names like hydrochloric acid, nitric acid, and sulphurous acid. Recently I was asked why some are hydro-, while others are -ic or -ous?
Before answering the questions about naming, I should introduce the generic formula of an inorganic acid. It goes like this:
HnAnion,
where n, the number of H atoms, is equal to the negative charge on the anion. (An anion is a negatively charged ion.)
How to name the acid is determined by its anion, according to these three rules:
- If the anion is a single atom, such as S or Cl, the acid is a hydro- acid, with -ic following the atom’s name. Examples: H2S is hydrosulphuric acid; HCl is hydrochloric acid.
- If the anion is an -ate, such as nitrate, the acid is -ic. For instance, HNO3 is nitric acid, since its anion, NO3, is nitrate. Similarly, H2SO4 is sulphuric acid; you recognize its anion, SO4, as sulphate.
- If the anion is an -ite, such as nitrite, the acid is -ous. Therefore, HNO2 is nitrous acid, since its anion, NO2, is nitrite. H2SO3 is sulphurous acid; note its anion, SO3, is sulphite.
These hints should answer most questions about inorganic acid nomenclature at the high school level:)
Source: Mortimer, Charles E. Chemistry, sixth edition. Belmont, California: Wadsworth Publishing Company, 1986.
Jack of Oracle Tutoring by Jack and Diane, Campbell River, BC.
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