Sovi.AI - AI Math Tutor

Scan to solve math questions

QUESTION IMAGE

fill in the table by selecting the correct iupac name for each formula.…

Question

fill in the table by selecting the correct iupac name for each formula.
chemical formula name
rbcl rubidium chloride
bes beryllium sulfide
ba(c₂h₃o₂)₂ barium carbohydrate
csclo₃ cesium(i) chlorate
show periodic table

Explanation:

Response

To solve this, we analyze each chemical formula and correct its IUPAC name:

For \(\boldsymbol{\ce{RbCl}}\):
  • \( \ce{Rb} \) is rubidium (not "rubidium" misspelled as "rubidium"—wait, the original has "rubidium" as "rubidium"? No, the error is the spelling: "rubidium" (correct) vs. "rubidium" (wait, no, the original dropdown has "rubidium chloride" (correct spelling: "rubidium" is correct, "rubidium" is the element). Wait, no—\( \ce{Rb} \) is rubidium, so "rubidium chloride" is correct. Wait, maybe the user’s image has a typo, but assuming the formula is \( \ce{RbCl} \), the name is rubidium chloride (correct spelling: "rubidium" not "rubidium"—wait, "rubidium" is correct. So if the dropdown has "rubidium chloride", that’s correct.
For \(\boldsymbol{\ce{BeS}}\):
  • \( \ce{Be} \) is beryllium, \( \ce{S} \) is sulfide (sulfide ion \( \ce{S^{2-}} \)).
  • Correct name: beryllium sulfide (the dropdown has "beryllium sulfide"—wait, the user’s image shows "beryllium sulfide" as the option, which is correct.
For \(\boldsymbol{\ce{Ba(C2H3O2)2}}\):
  • \( \ce{C2H3O2^-} \) is the acetate ion (\( \ce{CH3COO^-} \), acetate).
  • \( \ce{Ba} \) is barium (charge \( +2 \), so 2 acetate ions balance it).
  • Correct name: barium acetate (not "barium carbohydrate"—carbohydrate is organic, not an ion. Acetate is the anion here).
For \(\boldsymbol{\ce{CsClO3}}\):
  • \( \ce{Cs} \) is cesium (group 1, charge \( +1 \), so no need to specify (I) in the name, as cesium only forms \( +1 \) ions).
  • \( \ce{ClO3^-} \) is chlorate ion.
  • Correct name: cesium chlorate (not "cesium(I) chlorate"—cesium’s charge is always \( +1 \), so the (I) is unnecessary).
Final Table (Corrected):
Chemical FormulaCorrect IUPAC Name
\( \ce{BeS} \)beryllium sulfide
\( \ce{Ba(C2H3O2)2} \)barium acetate
\( \ce{CsClO3} \)cesium chlorate
Summary of Corrections:
  • \( \ce{Ba(C2H3O2)2} \): Change from "barium carbohydrate" to "barium acetate".
  • \( \ce{CsClO3} \): Change from "cesium(I) chlorate" to "cesium chlorate".
  • \( \ce{BeS} \): "beryllium sulfide" is correct (assuming the dropdown’s "beryllium" was a typo, but if the option is "beryllium sulfide", that’s correct).
  • \( \ce{RbCl} \): "rubidium chloride" is correct (spelling: "rubidium" is correct).
Final Answers (Table):
Chemical FormulaName
\( \ce{BeS} \)beryllium sulfide
\( \ce{Ba(C2H3O2)2} \)barium acetate
\( \ce{CsClO3} \)cesium chlorate

Answer:

To solve this, we analyze each chemical formula and correct its IUPAC name:

For \(\boldsymbol{\ce{RbCl}}\):
  • \( \ce{Rb} \) is rubidium (not "rubidium" misspelled as "rubidium"—wait, the original has "rubidium" as "rubidium"? No, the error is the spelling: "rubidium" (correct) vs. "rubidium" (wait, no, the original dropdown has "rubidium chloride" (correct spelling: "rubidium" is correct, "rubidium" is the element). Wait, no—\( \ce{Rb} \) is rubidium, so "rubidium chloride" is correct. Wait, maybe the user’s image has a typo, but assuming the formula is \( \ce{RbCl} \), the name is rubidium chloride (correct spelling: "rubidium" not "rubidium"—wait, "rubidium" is correct. So if the dropdown has "rubidium chloride", that’s correct.
For \(\boldsymbol{\ce{BeS}}\):
  • \( \ce{Be} \) is beryllium, \( \ce{S} \) is sulfide (sulfide ion \( \ce{S^{2-}} \)).
  • Correct name: beryllium sulfide (the dropdown has "beryllium sulfide"—wait, the user’s image shows "beryllium sulfide" as the option, which is correct.
For \(\boldsymbol{\ce{Ba(C2H3O2)2}}\):
  • \( \ce{C2H3O2^-} \) is the acetate ion (\( \ce{CH3COO^-} \), acetate).
  • \( \ce{Ba} \) is barium (charge \( +2 \), so 2 acetate ions balance it).
  • Correct name: barium acetate (not "barium carbohydrate"—carbohydrate is organic, not an ion. Acetate is the anion here).
For \(\boldsymbol{\ce{CsClO3}}\):
  • \( \ce{Cs} \) is cesium (group 1, charge \( +1 \), so no need to specify (I) in the name, as cesium only forms \( +1 \) ions).
  • \( \ce{ClO3^-} \) is chlorate ion.
  • Correct name: cesium chlorate (not "cesium(I) chlorate"—cesium’s charge is always \( +1 \), so the (I) is unnecessary).
Final Table (Corrected):
Chemical FormulaCorrect IUPAC Name
\( \ce{BeS} \)beryllium sulfide
\( \ce{Ba(C2H3O2)2} \)barium acetate
\( \ce{CsClO3} \)cesium chlorate
Summary of Corrections:
  • \( \ce{Ba(C2H3O2)2} \): Change from "barium carbohydrate" to "barium acetate".
  • \( \ce{CsClO3} \): Change from "cesium(I) chlorate" to "cesium chlorate".
  • \( \ce{BeS} \): "beryllium sulfide" is correct (assuming the dropdown’s "beryllium" was a typo, but if the option is "beryllium sulfide", that’s correct).
  • \( \ce{RbCl} \): "rubidium chloride" is correct (spelling: "rubidium" is correct).
Final Answers (Table):
Chemical FormulaName
\( \ce{BeS} \)beryllium sulfide
\( \ce{Ba(C2H3O2)2} \)barium acetate
\( \ce{CsClO3} \)cesium chlorate