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Platinum
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Ok, I asked this question a looooong time ago, (it may have been at the 'Point'), and I never did get an agreed upon answer.

If H2O2 is Hydrogen Peroxide, what is H2O?

I took a semester of high school chemistry so I know there are naming conventions based on things like atoms per molecule, or the ratio of oxygen in a molecule, etc. Obviously I have lost all that knowledge and am relying on all you avid chemists to at least come to a consensus on the chemical name for water.

While we're at it, why is Oxygen nearly always represented as O2, and not just O? I know that the 2 means two atoms per molecule but isn't one atom of Oxygen still oxygen?
 
Posts: 1860 | Location: 39° -84.5° | Registered: 06-28-02Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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First the oxygen. Basicallly, we write it as O2 because that is how it actually exists. The oxygen that you breathe exists as pairs of oxygen atoms bound together. Oxygen atoms don't like to be alone (don't you love how chemists always talk about chemicals as if they have emotional issues?). The same goes for hydrogen, but not for helium (helium is anti-social Wink), so you would see those represented as H2 and He, respectively.


Now, on to water. First off, no self-respecting chemist would refer to as anything but "water" or maybe "H two O" unless they were making some sort of joke. But, if they did, it would be dihydrogen monoxide. A case might be made for hydrogen hydroxide, but I think this is a worse choice. The first name treats it as a molecular compound and the second treats it as an ionic compound.



These questions highlight two things about naming chemicals:

Many chemicals go by a common name (especially those that are older than our knowledge of what they actually are, such as water, or those that would have extremely long names, such as proteins)

The most common or earliest known form of an element is usually given the same name as the element (So, the relatively uncommon and comparatively recently discovered O3 is called ozone, but the very common and longer-known O2 is just oxygen.

[This message was edited by methos5000 on 05-30-03 at 12:23 PM.]
 
Posts: 5891 | Location: Indiana | Registered: 06-13-02Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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Thanks methos. I was going to ask you how you did subscript but then I forgot I wasn't in the DR.
 
Posts: 1860 | Location: 39° -84.5° | Registered: 06-28-02Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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I prefer dihydrogen monoxide (H2O) However it isn't really used that much - But it does make for some interesting looks when you tell people that your well has been found to contain high quantities of dihydrogen monoxide - especially after you give them a glass of water.

Big Grin Big Grin Big Grin Big Grin

David
 
Posts: 4014 | Location: Leaving land, heading for the ocean | Registered: 06-03-02Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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I'm still confused. If the prefix "di" means 2, then why isn't H2O2 called 'dihydrogen peroxide'? Or for that matter 'dihydrogen dioxide'? What does "per" indicate?
 
Posts: 1860 | Location: 39° -84.5° | Registered: 06-28-02Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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There are 2 ways to name inorganic compounds.

The first is used for molecular compounds. For this, you just add prefixes to show the numbers of each atom. This would make H2O2 dihydrogen dioxide, if it were a molecular compound.

For ionic compounds, however, You simply list the cation (positive ion) and then the anion (negative ion). Because you know the charge of each ion, you can figure out the proportions without prefixes. The hydrogen cation (H1+) is simply called hydrogen in this naming system. The O22- ion, is called peroxide. Putting them together, you end up with hydrogen peroxide. You know there must be 2 hydrogen ions for each peroxide ion to belance out the charge. Similarly, the OH1- ion is called hydroxide. So, if water were to be named as an ionic compound, it would be called hydrogen hydroxide.

So why is O22- called peroxide? Per- indicates that an atom in the ion is in its highest oxidation state (most negative charge). Peroxide is oxygen in its highest oxidation state.
 
Posts: 5891 | Location: Indiana | Registered: 06-13-02Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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I'd give my left particle to be that smart. Thanks for explaining methos.
 
Posts: 1860 | Location: 39° -84.5° | Registered: 06-28-02Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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Ditto.... Big Grin
 
Posts: 9130 | Location: PA, USA | Registered: 06-05-02Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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An alternate view of Dihydrogen Monoxide. Eek

DHMO.ORG Wink

Mike b. (AKA Byter)

This message has been edited. Last edited by: DorianGreyed,
 
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