Year 7 Science · Unit 2 · Lesson 15

Chemical Formulas and Naming

Challenge Worksheet

Name
Date
Class

Learning Goals

Find the mistake

A student wrote this answer

"Chemical compounds are easy to name. For the formula H₂S, I would call it 'hydrogen sulphur' because it contains hydrogen and sulphur. For MgO I'd call it 'magnesium oxygen'. The formula NaCl must be 'chlorine sodium' because I write the second element first when naming. And CaF₂ would be 'calcium fluorine' — simple."

1. List every naming mistake the student made. There are at least four errors — find them all. For each one, identify which compound is affected.

Challenge4 marks

2. Write the correct IUPAC name for each of the four compounds: H₂S, MgO, NaCl, CaF₂.

Challenge4 marks

3. Explain the -ide naming rule in your own words. Why do you think scientists agreed to use a fixed rule like this, rather than letting each chemist choose their own name?

Challenge3 marks

1. A student correctly names AlCl₃ as "aluminium chloride" but then incorrectly names KBr as "potassium bromine". Identify the single error and write the correct name. Then explain the rule they forgot to apply.

Challenge 3 marks

2. Sodium chloride (NaCl) is found in Australian saltpans like Kati Thanda–Lake Eyre in South Australia. Calcium carbonate (CaCO₃) is the main mineral in limestone forming the Nullarbor caves. CaCO₃ has three elements — does the -ide rule still apply? Explain why or why not, and give the formal name if you can.

Challenge 3 marks

Wrap Up

In one sentence, what was the main idea of this lesson?