Nickel (II) bromide hexahydrate - I didn't know where to start on this one. How would you write out the chemical formula with something that had 3 parts?
A hydrate means that it has associated waters - that is usually indicated in a formula by adding a dot and then the water. In your case, NiBr
2.6H
2O
Ammonium phosphate - I wrote down the chemical formula as (NH4)3PO4, but a website I went to said that it's H12N3O4P?
I prefer your formula, because it shows the structure of the compound. The formula from the website you looked at gave only the empirical formula.
Potassium dichromate - Again, I wrote this down as K(Cr2O7), but a website I went to said that it's K2(Cr2O7)? Both K and Cr2O7 have positive charges, so how would I know what sub number to put on the K in order to balance them out?
At this level, probably easiest just to memorize that the dichromate ion has a charge of -2 (Cr
2O
72-). Later you will learn the structures of complex anions like phosphates, chromates, sulfates, and chlorates, and this will make more sense.
KC2H3O2 - Again, how would I go about naming something that has 3 parts?
Again, this is a structural thing that for now you will have to memorize. The "C
2H
3O
2 is the acetate anion, and has a charge of -1. The name for this compound would be potassium acetate. See
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AcetateFeSO4 · 7H2O - No idea where to start on this one; what does the · mean in regards to chemistry?
See the previous explanation - that dot and the H
2O's mean associated water, and the compound would be named as a -hydrate, with a prefix (in this case "hepta") indicating how many associated waters - Iron(II) sulfate heptahydrate
H3PO4 - I had this written down has hydrogen phosphate, but I've seen everyone else call it phosphoric acid. Why is that?
Because when hydrogen is associated with complex anions or with halogens, it is acidic. Another quirk about naming. If there are other metals present, this isn't the case, but dihydrogen sulfate (H
2SO
4) is called sulfuric acid, dihydrogen carbonate (H
2CO
3) is called carbonic acid, hydrogen chloride (HCl) is called hydrochloric acid. If there is another metal present, the name usually reverts back to hydrogen - for example, K
2HPO
4 would be dipotassium hydrogen phosphate.
I hope some of this is useful - good luck.