Specifically with radicals of the oxy acids - formation of salts.
My book says - The valence of hte radicals is determined by the number of H atoms in the acids. H2CO3 and 2 H atoms, thus the radical is CO3 2-.
-Prefixes do not change but the suffixes do. Therefore, -ous becomes -ite and -ic becomes -ate.
Can someone tell me how this relates to oxy acids, it seems to vague for me to make the connection. Heres one more example it gives.
NaClO = sodium hypochlorite
NaClO3 = sodium chlorate.
To be honest, I'm not exactly sure what your question means. Are you asking about "valence" or are you asking about the naming convention of polyatomic ions?
I'm assuming it is a question about naming
From:
http://chemed.chem.purdue.edu/genchem/topicreview/bp/ch2/names.html#polynegI have extracted the following summary table and a brief explanation/justification for the names. The inorganic naming problem comes about because the "central" atoms for example nitrogen in nitrite or nitrate can achieve different oxidation states and this is an attempt to produce a systematic naming convention (I think it has been tinkered with over the years)
[copy]
Common Polyatomic Negative Ions
-1 ions
HCO
3- bicarbonate HSO
4- hydrogen sulfate (bisulfate)
CH
3CO
2- acetate/ethanoate ClO
4- perchlorate
NO
3- nitrate ClO
3- chlorate
NO
2- nitrite ClO
2- chlorite
<< snip more>>
-2 ions
CO
32- carbonate O
22- peroxide
SO
42- sulfate CrO
42- chromate
<< snip more >>
-3 ions
PO
43- phosphate AsO
43- arsenate
BO
33- borate
Naming Polyatomic Ions
At first glance, the nomenclature of the polyatomic negative ions in the table above seems hopeless. There are several general rules, however, that can bring some order out of this apparent chaos.
The name of the ion usually ends in either -ite or -ate. The -ite ending indicates a low oxidation state. Thus,the NO
2- ion is the nitrite ion.
The -ate ending indicates a high oxidation state. The NO
3- ion, for example, is the nitrate ion.
The prefix hypo- is used to indicate the very lowest oxidation state. The ClO
- ion, for example, is the hypochlorite ion.
The prefix per- (as in hyper-) is used to indicate the very highest oxidation state. The ClO
4- ion is therefore the perchlorate ion.
There are only a handful of exceptions to these generalizations. The names of the hydroxide (OH
-), cyanide (CN
-), and peroxide (O
22-) ions, for example, have the -ide ending because they were once thought to be monatomic ions.
[end copy]
More information on "traditional" inorganic naming:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IUPAC_nomenclature_of_inorganic_chemistryI thought that polyatomic oxy-anions had moved to names like
hypochlorite = chlorate(I)
chlorite = chlorate(III)
chlorate = chlorate(V)
perchlorate - chlorate (VII)
based on the oxidation state of the non-oxygen atoms.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chlorate#Other_oxyanionsBut I can't find a reference to this naming convention. Maybe it has been abandoned ?
Clive