Hydroxides are a group of compounds not well known in general, although you might know them by their commercial name in some cases.
Copper Hydroxide |
Some Hydroxides are present on drain cleaners; some are used on making soap and detergents.
Hydroxides are formed when Metal Oxides react with Water.
CaO + H2O ---> Ca(OH)2
Hydroxides have this writing structure:
Metal OH
And like with Oxides we just need to figure out the subscripts A,B.
MetalA (OH)B
For Hydroxides the (OH) radical works with -1. Now you write the oxidation number of the metal and the valence of the OH radical.
Now you just have to SWITCH the numbers like this and you are done, know you know how to make Hydroxides. Metal oxidation numbers can be found here
Never write the subscript of the OH radical WITHOUT ( ). |
HYDROXIDE NOMENCLATURE
There are 3 ways of naming Hydroxides.
- TRADITIONAL nomenclature
- IUPAC nomenclature
- STOCK nomenclature
TRADITIONAL NOMENCLATURE
You need to learn a little system of prefixes and suffixes (for the oxidation numbers)
- If it only has 1 oxidation number there isn’t a suffix to use, some people use the –ic suffix.
- If it has 2, the higher is –ic and the lower is –ous.
-ous | -ic |
+2 | +3 |
+1 | +2 |
Note that the suffix does not depend on the number but on how many valences the element has. I’ve seen people making the mistake to think that +2 is always –ous or always –ic.
EXAMPLE
Name this Hydroxide
Fe(OH)3
Remember how to make hydroxide formulas? Now we just need to go backwards to figure out which oxidation number the metal is using.
Now that we know which it is, let’s find the correct suffix to use. It has 1 oxidation numbers: +2 ----> -ous
+3 ----> -ic |
Traditional nomenclature has this writing structure:
[ELEMENT NAME][SUFFIX] Hydroxide
So we just need to fill the name of the metal and the suffix
Ferric Hydroxide
Be careful with some element names, some aren’t use in nomenclature, such as IRON (Fe): so it wouldn’t be IRONIC (heheh), but FERRIC.
IUPAC NOMENCLATURE
This one is the easiest in my opinion, it is also called “systematic”; you just need to learn these prefixes:
Number | Prefix |
1 | mono- |
2 | di- |
3 | tri- |
4 | tetra- |
5 | penta- |
6 | hexa- |
7 | hepta- |
8 | octa- |
9 | nona- |
10 | deca- |
EXAMPLE:
Fe(OH)3
You just need to use the prefixes to name the element according of the subscripts.
In this case the structure of IUPAC nomenclature is
[PREFIX][ELEMENT NAME] [PREFIX]Hydroxide
So this is the name of the oxide according to IUPAC Nomenclature (if the metal has a subscript of one we don’t use MONO, we only use MONO if the radical OH has 1 as subscript):
Iron triHydroxide
STOCK NOMENCLATURE
This is an easy nomenclature as well; you don’t have to know anything else but the oxidation numbers of the elements.
EXAMPLE:
Fe(OH)3
First step is to figure out the oxidation number of the metal:
The structure of STOCK nomenclature is
[ELEMENT NAME][OX. NUMBER] Hydroxide
This is the name according to Stock Nomenclature:
Iron(III) Hydroxide
Be careful with writing a space between the name and the Roman number, there isn't one.
Coming up! Hydroxides Exercises
7 comments:
very interesting stuff. i had little or no knowledge of this, so thanks!
+followed
Ahh, reading through this post made me remember some stuff from school. Nostalgia.. :)
Remember working with these in Chem 121 lab. Oh...great times. =p
Really looking forward to Hydroxides Exercises!
Oh boy, last lesson on this was like 8 years ago :3
head ache HEAD ACHE
Sodium Hydroxide kinda looks like meth.
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