The suffix "ide" at the end of the name of an element typically indicates that the element is in the form of an anion or a negatively charged ion. For example, chloride (Cl-) is the anion form of chlorine.
No: Anions of nonmetals end in the suffix -ide, but no element name ends in this group of letters.
An "-ide" ending in a compound typically indicates that the compound is a binary compound, meaning it consists of two different elements. The element with the "-ide" ending usually gains electrons to form an anion.
When an element forms a negative ion, the name changes to IDE, fir example: chloride
If it's an ion with a negative charge, it is an anion.
The name of a binary compound typically ends with the suffix "-ide."
if the negative ion is a single element, the end of its name changes to -ide
The second element's name is changed so that it ends in the suffix -ide.
No: Anions of nonmetals end in the suffix -ide, but no element name ends in this group of letters.
ide apex :)
An "-ide" ending in a compound typically indicates that the compound is a binary compound, meaning it consists of two different elements. The element with the "-ide" ending usually gains electrons to form an anion.
The name of the first element is followed by that of the second element, the latter of which ends in -ide.
At the end of a covalent bond, you add the suffix "-ide" to the name of the element that is receiving electrons. For example, in a covalent bond between hydrogen and chlorine to form hydrogen chloride, you add "-ide" to chlorine to get chloride.
The ending of the second element is changed to -ide
The ending of the second element is changed to -ide
Anions end in -ide if they are monatomic. Example: chlorine becomes "chloride." Polyatomic ions will have different suffixes.
The first element in a compound that has its ending dropped and "-ide" added is the element that forms a monatomic anion in the compound. This is usually the second element in the modern name of a compound. For example, a compound of sodium and chlorine that contains a sodium cation and a chloride anion is called "sodium chloride". However, a century or more ago, this was often called "chloride of sodium", so that the rule still works even for this style of naming.
-ide