It's becoming more and more complex as we advance in this exciting organometallic series. Nevertheless i can't wait for the upcoming videos and i hope Prof Dave will have the time to reply to some genuine humble queries from the audience, as there is a decent number of individuals who want to truly learn and grasp as much as they can from the topics provided by Professor Dave (a true professor indeed).
That makes better sense how organocuprates are a weaker source of carbanions than organolithiums and Grignard’s, with how the Li+Cu+ complex can form a stronger bond to two carbanions, with how the Cu+ can polarize to both sides of that better.
Oh lol, please dont tell me that i was the only person who misread the title and thinking that he was going to talk about the music Genre ACID-BASS and the differences between hardcore acid-bass and soft, more jazz-inspired Acid-Bass
Hi, I’m a diagnosed schizophrenic and I need you to make a video disproving targeted individuals beliefs. Specifically mind reading and mind control technology. I am very scared the United States government has mind control and thought broadcasting technology and are using it on me. It would be really good to see your arguments amongst the search results for targeted individuals
@@craigkennedy5104 yes definitely. I try really hard to not believe in mind control and thought broad casting but idk my brain just fucking hates me. It would just be nice if I came across more professionals debunking the conspiracy. Right now it’s basically just my boyfriend I have that I have trying to tell me all the science behind it. I mean, my boyfriend is pretty good at science, but he doesn’t have a degree
@@smellyhero64 mind reading/controlling technology definitely doesn't exist. I've had those types of thoughts before, so I know it doesn't really matter if you know it's impossible, it still _feels_ like it's true at the time. do you currently see a doctor? if you're having those thoughts, please communicate that to him/her... medication can make a huge difference, but it's important to get on one that works, at the right dosage. the side effects can suck, but some are better than others. personally, the best one I found was zyprexa/olanzapine.
@@simonmagus2199 yeah I’ve been seeing doctors for it for 6 years now. Medications have helped voices go away but not the thought broad casting and mind reading delusions. Thank you for understanding and not making fun of me.
@@smellyhero64 of course. anyone that would make fun of you on that basis is truly awful. and those are really common symptoms, you're not alone in that regard. what I would do, is think of what you want to talk about at your next psych appt and write it down, questions or concerns; it's really easy to forget what you wanted to say in the moment with the dr in front of you. don't be afraid to self-advocate; make sure you get heard. there are some good add-on meds that can be used with antipsychotics - abilify and lamictal have been particularly helpful for me. (I would stay away from brexulti, I had terrible side effects) also, cognitive behavioral therapy can be really helpful, if you've never tried. good luck!
@@simonmagus2199 Medications that have terrible side effects for you might be the right ones for him so don't discourage him from at least giving them a try if his doctor recommends them because of genetic polymorphisms maybe causing you to metabolize them in a slightly different way causing some to be better/worse for you than for him. Medicine should have a more individual approach not only for mental health but anything but that just isn't sustainable because of lack of doctors or funding. People just respond very differently to different medications so there isn't a solution that works for anybody.
Hello, Professor. I have a report on functional derivatives of carboxylic acid. I would like a source or books that talk about them. Can you help me with that please?
Sir, if oxygen has one bond and three lone pairs, as in hydroxide ion, it will have a formal charge of-1. From where does this one additional charge or one extra electron come? Also in the case of carbonate ion two of the oxygen atoms are single covalently bonded, so if oxygen has 6 valance electrons and it is sharing its one electron in bond formation then how does the lone pair upon bond formation of oxygen atom count upto three I mean since it has to share one of its six electrons in the bond, shouldn't it have 5 electrons. How after forming a single bond this one additional electron comes from here so that it provides the atom with a negative charge?
The electron in hydroxide (or 2 electrons in oxide) came from a metal at some point to form an ionic compound. Oxygen forms hydroxide/oxide through reduction, so something must have been oxidized. In carbonate, oxygen has 6 valence electrons and it shares 2 electrons with carbon to complete the octet. It doesn't lose the electron, so the electron count would remain at 6. When looking at covalent bonds, you count electrons from the perspective of both elements that are sharing them. The traditional VSEPR model doesn't do carbonate's bonding so well, because the electrons are actually delocalized about all 3 oxygen atoms. Molecular Orbital theory offers a better explanation of how the bonding works.
Hey I just watched your video on pseudoscience, and since I trust your channel do you think you could review some other channels? I’m having trouble knowing who to trus and when I think I find someone who “informs” hidden info it’s hard to know if it’s bullshit or not. I’ve been watching this guy named theoria apophasis and he makes some pretty big claims that sound to good to be true at times. Could you check him out possibly, I’d like to know what you think
@@ProfessorDaveExplains does he say anything thats blatantly wrong or is he just weird? also i was wondering your take on rosicrucianism which ive been looking into recently
new subscriber, small time (not much) request. could you make a debunk video on roger spurr and mudfossil university claims of giant fossilized dragons?
Hydrogen has a very low electronegativity so when it gains an electron it forms a large electron cloud. This makes it very polarizable, which is a quality of a soft base.
_"...and we are certainly aware of the Bronsted-Lowry definition for acidity and basicity..."_ Wow, way to call me out for not watching the previous tutorial videos in this series before watching this one
I think there's a typo in 2:54 (soft acids have low charge density, not hard acids)
Your depth and breadth of knowledge is very impressive
Your awesome intro and outro tricks me into thinking I'm watching this for fun and not for my soil chem exam. Thank you
i’m thankful i get to watch these back during break as a refresher for next semester
Merry Christmas, Dave!
This video goes hard thanks Dave
This solved a lot of questions for me. Thanks!
It's becoming more and more complex as we advance in this exciting organometallic series. Nevertheless i can't wait for the upcoming videos and i hope Prof Dave will have the time to reply to some genuine humble queries from the audience, as there is a decent number of individuals who want to truly learn and grasp as much as they can from the topics provided by Professor Dave (a true professor indeed).
That makes better sense how organocuprates are a weaker source of carbanions than organolithiums and Grignard’s, with how the Li+Cu+ complex can form a stronger bond to two carbanions, with how the Cu+ can polarize to both sides of that better.
Oh lol, please dont tell me that i was the only person who misread the title and thinking that he was going to talk about the music Genre ACID-BASS and the differences between hardcore acid-bass and soft, more jazz-inspired Acid-Bass
Thanks a lot Prof ❤
ربنا يباركلك ♥
Thanks a lot. You literally helped me a lot❤
thank you
Thanks. Much appreciated!
Hi, I’m a diagnosed schizophrenic and I need you to make a video disproving targeted individuals beliefs. Specifically mind reading and mind control technology. I am very scared the United States government has mind control and thought broadcasting technology and are using it on me. It would be really good to see your arguments amongst the search results for targeted individuals
@@craigkennedy5104 yes definitely. I try really hard to not believe in mind control and thought broad casting but idk my brain just fucking hates me. It would just be nice if I came across more professionals debunking the conspiracy. Right now it’s basically just my boyfriend I have that I have trying to tell me all the science behind it. I mean, my boyfriend is pretty good at science, but he doesn’t have a degree
@@smellyhero64 mind reading/controlling technology definitely doesn't exist. I've had those types of thoughts before, so I know it doesn't really matter if you know it's impossible, it still _feels_ like it's true at the time. do you currently see a doctor? if you're having those thoughts, please communicate that to him/her... medication can make a huge difference, but it's important to get on one that works, at the right dosage. the side effects can suck, but some are better than others. personally, the best one I found was zyprexa/olanzapine.
@@simonmagus2199 yeah I’ve been seeing doctors for it for 6 years now. Medications have helped voices go away but not the thought broad casting and mind reading delusions.
Thank you for understanding and not making fun of me.
@@smellyhero64 of course. anyone that would make fun of you on that basis is truly awful. and those are really common symptoms, you're not alone in that regard.
what I would do, is think of what you want to talk about at your next psych appt and write it down, questions or concerns; it's really easy to forget what you wanted to say in the moment with the dr in front of you. don't be afraid to self-advocate; make sure you get heard. there are some good add-on meds that can be used with antipsychotics - abilify and lamictal have been particularly helpful for me. (I would stay away from brexulti, I had terrible side effects)
also, cognitive behavioral therapy can be really helpful, if you've never tried. good luck!
@@simonmagus2199 Medications that have terrible side effects for you might be the right ones for him so don't discourage him from at least giving them a try if his doctor recommends them because of genetic polymorphisms maybe causing you to metabolize them in a slightly different way causing some to be better/worse for you than for him. Medicine should have a more individual approach not only for mental health but anything but that just isn't sustainable because of lack of doctors or funding. People just respond very differently to different medications so there isn't a solution that works for anybody.
Hello, Professor. I have a report on functional derivatives of carboxylic acid. I would like a source or books that talk about them. Can you help me with that please?
Thanks 🙏🙏
You are the best thank you for making these videos Prof!!!
رائع د /ديف 😍😍😍😍😍😍
This man is MVP!!
My uni professors could never teach like that!
Sir, if oxygen has one bond and three lone pairs, as in hydroxide ion, it will have a formal charge of-1. From where does this one additional charge or one extra electron come? Also in the case of carbonate ion two of the oxygen atoms are single covalently bonded, so if oxygen has 6 valance electrons and it is sharing its one electron in bond formation then how does the lone pair upon bond formation of oxygen atom count upto three I mean since it has to share one of its six electrons in the bond, shouldn't it have 5 electrons. How after forming a single bond this one additional electron comes from here so that it provides the atom with a negative charge?
The electron in hydroxide (or 2 electrons in oxide) came from a metal at some point to form an ionic compound. Oxygen forms hydroxide/oxide through reduction, so something must have been oxidized. In carbonate, oxygen has 6 valence electrons and it shares 2 electrons with carbon to complete the octet. It doesn't lose the electron, so the electron count would remain at 6. When looking at covalent bonds, you count electrons from the perspective of both elements that are sharing them. The traditional VSEPR model doesn't do carbonate's bonding so well, because the electrons are actually delocalized about all 3 oxygen atoms. Molecular Orbital theory offers a better explanation of how the bonding works.
an example of this is seen in alkyl halides' interaction with KNO2 and AgNo2.......
I am disappointed at the lack of Roland TB-303s in this video.
I am India sir
woah it's india (the country)
Hahahahahaha
Nobody is perfect...
@@galileog8945 why
@@galileog8945 what's your country
Hey I just watched your video on pseudoscience, and since I trust your channel do you think you could review some other channels? I’m having trouble knowing who to trus and when I think I find someone who “informs” hidden info it’s hard to know if it’s bullshit or not. I’ve been watching this guy named theoria apophasis and he makes some pretty big claims that sound to good to be true at times. Could you check him out possibly, I’d like to know what you think
That guy is a delusional fruitcake. Ignore him.
@@ProfessorDaveExplains does he say anything thats blatantly wrong or is he just weird? also i was wondering your take on rosicrucianism which ive been looking into recently
new subscriber, small time (not much) request. could you make a debunk video on roger spurr and mudfossil university claims of giant fossilized dragons?
Debunking Rogers B.S. is beneath Dave, even a 10 year old can debunk Roger
I got a quiz question, what's HSAB? I dunno what to answer 😭
Watch the video! Hard and Soft Acids and Bases.
Why is hydride considered a soft base?
Hydrogen has a very low electronegativity so when it gains an electron it forms a large electron cloud. This makes it very polarizable, which is a quality of a soft base.
hi dave i’m a fan of your work can you do a debunk of yt channel answers in genesis
Has dave watch the response video from pierre because he responded from his video 1 year ago
Yeah, it was too stupid to bother acknowledging.
@@ProfessorDaveExplains lol
We have to get a graham hancock debunk! That guy is getting too popular and is using the same old anti science play book.
_"...and we are certainly aware of the Bronsted-Lowry definition for acidity and basicity..."_
Wow, way to call me out for not watching the previous tutorial videos in this series before watching this one
Ya gotta watch the gen chem stuff first! This playlist is advanced.
I want Dave to debunk Guy McPherson (a climate change doomist who believes we will all die in 2026)
Remember when Pierre-Marie Robitaille destroyed dave.. classic🤣
No, since that never happened. Emoji emoji emoji.
420
I clicked by mistake thinking it said the difference between Soft Acid House and Hard Acid House 🤦♂️