Can Anyone Give Me An Easy Way To Figuring Out The Chemical Formulas To Compounds?

for example the chemical formula for potassium fluoride, magnesium oxide etc. i just dont get where the numbers and charges and that go

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3 Responses to “Can Anyone Give Me An Easy Way To Figuring Out The Chemical Formulas To Compounds?”

  1. Ruphert J says:

    do you know how to see what the charge is, look on the periodic table, column 1a all have +1 charge, column 2a has +2 charge, column 3a have +3 charge. Now start from the right side of the table, all the 8a have no charge, the 7a have -1 charge, the 6a have -2 charge, the 5a have -3 charge and the 4a have -4 charge.
    Now to get the chemical formula you just make them neutral, Potassium is in 1a so it has a +1 charge Fluorine is in 7a so it has a -1 charge, so they go together at a 1:1 ratio. KFl
    Mg is 2+ and Oxygen is 2- so they go together and make a neutral product as well MgO. Now say you got Potassium Oxide. Potassium has 1+ so you need two of those to make the product neutral because Oxygen is 2-. so K2O The 2 should be a subscript of course.

  2. perox1so says:

    metal in front non metal in behind.
    Na Cl = NaCl
    KF
    Mg2O2 the 2 cancel out
    MgO
    G1 charge 1
    G2 charge2 and so on g7 charge 1 g6 charge 2 g 5 charge 3 g 4 charge 4 g 3 charge 3g8 charge none

  3. Doc_Cain says:

    It’s easy easy when u have ur periodic table on hand. For example with magnesium oxide (obviously u should know the symbols if not there’s only one thing to do… learn them)
    So we have: Mg and O,
    Mg is in the 2nd column and so has a charge of +2
    O is in the 2nd last column and so has a charge of -2
    So both have the same chare so just combine them: MgO
    If we look at water: H is in 1st column so has a +1 charge
    O is in 2nd last so has a charge of 2-
    so u need 2 H for every 1 O (because the charges need to balance.
    so: H2O (the 2 should be a subscript)
    all the elements between the 2nd column and the 3rd last column can have varying charges(except for silver, Ag which has a +1 charge), like iron, they normaly tell u what the charge is though like Fe(III) is iron with a 3+ charge, etc.
    (Rule of thum: the element with the lower amount of charge gets the higher number after it, in the resulting equation) for an example take a look at water again.
    Of course the best way to become quick and efficient in determining the resulting chemical formulas is to practice, practice, practive…
    Good Luck

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