Tiina 0 Posted January 18 Share Posted January 18 I would like to name the following compound. I know: cation: silver(I) anion: hydrogendithionite I´m not sure but I would correlate the cation and the anion, so silver(I) hydrogendithionite. Can I do this? Link to post Share on other sites
chenbeier 17 Posted January 18 Share Posted January 18 (edited) You can do, but the (I) is not necessary, because silver normaly is Ag+. But I don't think this is existing. Dithionite is a strong reducer and would reduce silver immediately. Edited January 18 by chenbeier Link to post Share on other sites
Tiina 0 Posted January 19 Author Share Posted January 19 Ok thank you. So I do not have to change the suffix to -ide (because anion) --> silver hydrogendithionide ? Link to post Share on other sites
chenbeier 17 Posted January 19 Share Posted January 19 ide is only used for single anions, like flouride F-, chloride Cl-, etc. ite and ate is used for more larger anions like sulfite SO3 2-, nitrate NO3 - etc. Link to post Share on other sites
Tiina 0 Posted January 19 Author Share Posted January 19 Ok thank you so the correct name is silber hydrogendithionite. Link to post Share on other sites
chenbeier 17 Posted January 19 Share Posted January 19 In English its silver hydrogen dithionite. In German Silberhydrogendithionit. Link to post Share on other sites
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now