i think the dots stand for the electrons the atom has on its valence shell that are not bonded in a covalent bond with another atom. for example in the video alkyl halide Cl shares two electrons with a carbon atom and has six electrons that are not bonded with any other atom (and we see those as the six dots in the video).
It helped a lot
thanks
Thanks!
What means the dots under or above the element? The pair of free electrons?
i think the dots stand for the electrons the atom has on its valence shell that are not bonded in a covalent bond with another atom. for example in the video alkyl halide Cl shares two electrons with a carbon atom and has six electrons that are not bonded with any other atom (and we see those as the six dots in the video).
What does he use to draw/type in?
Why is the thiol group not called an EthylThiol????? :(
+Dej Green because they aren't following the iupac standard
Dej Green why crying for it?
Which functional group does propanon have?
so do we just say diethyl when theres two ethyl groups?
That should be butane
isn't ethyl suppose to be triple bonded???
I didn't notice the bad joke till you pointed it out lol.
Explain in hindi 🙋
i dont get the joke 😂
Because the ether has an R group on either side of the oxygen..... Either sounds like ether
I don't get the ether joke XD
you mean.... I didn't get the joke ether? haha
Hindi me khaa hai