Respuesta :
IRON (II) OXIDE:
-Iron (II) has ionic charge of 2+
-Oxygen has ionic charge of 2-
1. Criss cross rule gives you:
Fe2O2
2. Reduce by greatest common factor rule:
FeO—> this is Iron (II) Oxide
CARBON TETRACHLORIDE:
-Carbon has room for 4 electrons (“charge” of -4)
-Tetra=4 —> Tetrachloride= 4 chlorine atoms
Together: CCl4
-Iron (II) has ionic charge of 2+
-Oxygen has ionic charge of 2-
1. Criss cross rule gives you:
Fe2O2
2. Reduce by greatest common factor rule:
FeO—> this is Iron (II) Oxide
CARBON TETRACHLORIDE:
-Carbon has room for 4 electrons (“charge” of -4)
-Tetra=4 —> Tetrachloride= 4 chlorine atoms
Together: CCl4
Answer:
D) FeO and CCl4 - One has charges that keep the ions bonded and the other does not.
Explanation:
Hello,
In this case, for the iron (II) oxide, in order to know its formula, it is necessary to realize that the (II) indicates the oxidation state it has, it meas +2 from the roman number translation, in such a way, by knowing oxygen works with -2, therefore, the formula turns out:
[tex]Fe^{+2}O^{-2}\rightarrow Fe_2O_2 \rightarrow FeO[/tex]
In addition, for carbon tetrachloride, the prefix tetra before chloride, points out there are four chlorined bonded to the carbon, that is why its formula is:
[tex]CCl_4[/tex]
In such a way the answer is D) FeO and CCl4 - One has charges that keep the ions bonded and the other does not.
Best regards.