QUESTION IMAGE
Question
decide whether each pair of elements in the table below will form an ionic compound. if they will, write the empirical formula and name of the compound formed in the spaces provided.
table headers: element #1, element #2, forms ionic compound? (yes/no radio buttons), empirical formula of ionic compound (text box), name of ionic compound (text box).
rows:
- element #1: oxygen, element #2: chlorine
- element #1: strontium, element #2: bromine
- element #1: oxygen, element #2: potassium
- element #1: oxygen, element #2: strontium
To solve this, we analyze each pair of elements:
1. Oxygen (O) and Chlorine (Cl)
- Step 1: Check Ionic Compound Formation
Ionic compounds form between metals and nonmetals. Oxygen (nonmetal) and Chlorine (nonmetal) are both nonmetals, so they form a covalent compound, not ionic.
→ Forms ionic compound? No
2. Strontium (Sr) and Bromine (Br)
- Step 1: Check Ionic Compound Formation
Strontium (metal, Group 2) and Bromine (nonmetal, Group 17) → metal + nonmetal = ionic compound.
→ Forms ionic compound? Yes
- Step 2: Determine Ions
Sr loses 2 electrons → \( \text{Sr}^{2+} \); Br gains 1 electron → \( \text{Br}^- \).
- Step 3: Balance Charges
To balance \( 2+ \) and \( 1- \), we need 2 Br⁻ for 1 Sr²⁺.
→ Empirical formula: \( \text{SrBr}_2 \)
- Step 4: Name the Compound
Metal (Sr) + nonmetal (Br, “bromide”) → Strontium bromide
3. Oxygen (O) and Potassium (K)
- Step 1: Check Ionic Compound Formation
Potassium (metal, Group 1) and Oxygen (nonmetal, Group 16) → metal + nonmetal = ionic compound.
→ Forms ionic compound? Yes
- Step 2: Determine Ions
K loses 1 electron → \( \text{K}^+ \); O gains 2 electrons → \( \text{O}^{2-} \).
- Step 3: Balance Charges
To balance \( 1+ \) and \( 2- \), we need 2 K⁺ for 1 O²⁻.
→ Empirical formula: \( \text{K}_2\text{O} \)
- Step 4: Name the Compound
Metal (K) + nonmetal (O, “oxide”) → Potassium oxide
4. Oxygen (O) and Strontium (Sr)
- Step 1: Check Ionic Compound Formation
Strontium (metal, Group 2) and Oxygen (nonmetal, Group 16) → metal + nonmetal = ionic compound.
→ Forms ionic compound? Yes
- Step 2: Determine Ions
Sr loses 2 electrons → \( \text{Sr}^{2+} \); O gains 2 electrons → \( \text{O}^{2-} \).
- Step 3: Balance Charges
\( 2+ \) and \( 2- \) balance in a 1:1 ratio.
→ Empirical formula: \( \text{SrO} \)
- Step 4: Name the Compound
Metal (Sr) + nonmetal (O, “oxide”) → Strontium oxide
Final Answers (Table Format)
| Element #1 | Element #2 | Forms Ionic Compound? | Empirical Formula | Name of Ionic Compound |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Strontium | Bromine | Yes | \( \text{SrBr}_2 \) | Strontium bromide |
| Oxygen | Potassium | Yes | \( \text{K}_2\text{O} \) | Potassium oxide |
| Oxygen | Strontium | Yes | \( \text{SrO} \) | Strontium oxide |
(For each row, mark “Yes”/“No” and fill the formula/name as above.)
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To solve this, we analyze each pair of elements:
1. Oxygen (O) and Chlorine (Cl)
- Step 1: Check Ionic Compound Formation
Ionic compounds form between metals and nonmetals. Oxygen (nonmetal) and Chlorine (nonmetal) are both nonmetals, so they form a covalent compound, not ionic.
→ Forms ionic compound? No
2. Strontium (Sr) and Bromine (Br)
- Step 1: Check Ionic Compound Formation
Strontium (metal, Group 2) and Bromine (nonmetal, Group 17) → metal + nonmetal = ionic compound.
→ Forms ionic compound? Yes
- Step 2: Determine Ions
Sr loses 2 electrons → \( \text{Sr}^{2+} \); Br gains 1 electron → \( \text{Br}^- \).
- Step 3: Balance Charges
To balance \( 2+ \) and \( 1- \), we need 2 Br⁻ for 1 Sr²⁺.
→ Empirical formula: \( \text{SrBr}_2 \)
- Step 4: Name the Compound
Metal (Sr) + nonmetal (Br, “bromide”) → Strontium bromide
3. Oxygen (O) and Potassium (K)
- Step 1: Check Ionic Compound Formation
Potassium (metal, Group 1) and Oxygen (nonmetal, Group 16) → metal + nonmetal = ionic compound.
→ Forms ionic compound? Yes
- Step 2: Determine Ions
K loses 1 electron → \( \text{K}^+ \); O gains 2 electrons → \( \text{O}^{2-} \).
- Step 3: Balance Charges
To balance \( 1+ \) and \( 2- \), we need 2 K⁺ for 1 O²⁻.
→ Empirical formula: \( \text{K}_2\text{O} \)
- Step 4: Name the Compound
Metal (K) + nonmetal (O, “oxide”) → Potassium oxide
4. Oxygen (O) and Strontium (Sr)
- Step 1: Check Ionic Compound Formation
Strontium (metal, Group 2) and Oxygen (nonmetal, Group 16) → metal + nonmetal = ionic compound.
→ Forms ionic compound? Yes
- Step 2: Determine Ions
Sr loses 2 electrons → \( \text{Sr}^{2+} \); O gains 2 electrons → \( \text{O}^{2-} \).
- Step 3: Balance Charges
\( 2+ \) and \( 2- \) balance in a 1:1 ratio.
→ Empirical formula: \( \text{SrO} \)
- Step 4: Name the Compound
Metal (Sr) + nonmetal (O, “oxide”) → Strontium oxide
Final Answers (Table Format)
| Element #1 | Element #2 | Forms Ionic Compound? | Empirical Formula | Name of Ionic Compound |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Strontium | Bromine | Yes | \( \text{SrBr}_2 \) | Strontium bromide |
| Oxygen | Potassium | Yes | \( \text{K}_2\text{O} \) | Potassium oxide |
| Oxygen | Strontium | Yes | \( \text{SrO} \) | Strontium oxide |
(For each row, mark “Yes”/“No” and fill the formula/name as above.)