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question 5 of 10
why are prefixes not used in naming ionic compounds?
a. a roman numeral is used instead of a prefix.
b. a subscript follows each name instead of a prefix.
c. two ions can combine in only one combination.
d. the number of ions is not fixed in a compound.
Brief Explanations
To determine why prefixes are not used in naming ionic compounds, we analyze each option:
- Option A: Roman numerals are used for transition metals to indicate charge, not as a replacement for prefixes in general ionic compound naming. Eliminate A.
- Option B: Subscripts in formulas show ion ratios, but naming doesn't use subscripts or prefixes in the same way. Eliminate B.
- Option C: Ionic compounds form based on charge balance. For example, Na⁺ and Cl⁻ form NaCl (only one ratio). Since the ion combination ratio is fixed by charge, prefixes (used for covalent compounds with variable ratios) aren't needed. This makes C correct.
- Option D: The number of ions in an ionic compound is fixed by charge balance (e.g., Mg²⁺ and O²⁻ form MgO, a fixed ratio). So D is incorrect.
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C. Two ions can combine in only one combination.