For Na3(PO4)3, is the three you tacked on at the end a mistake? Because PO4 is already a negative 3 polyatomic ion while Na3 is a positive 1 atom (but it has 3 of them), so, if you have 3 Na and 1 PO4 it balances out. But you wrote it like this, Na3(PO4)3. Is that a mistake or I'm I missing something. Thank you so much for these videos, i love them.
@@richardlouiechemistrylectures These videos are really amazing. Your lectures make these concepts seem easy even when they would be hard to wrap your head around reading from the book.
Yeah, I think you might have just prevented me from failing my Chemistry test so thanks for that.
OMG I love you!!! "it's not in the periodic chart, you've gotta study!!!"
For Na3(PO4)3, is the three you tacked on at the end a mistake? Because PO4 is already a negative 3 polyatomic ion while Na3 is a positive 1 atom (but it has 3 of them), so, if you have 3 Na and 1 PO4 it balances out. But you wrote it like this, Na3(PO4)3. Is that a mistake or I'm I missing something. Thank you so much for these videos, i love them.
You caught a mistake that I made. Sodium phosphate should be Na3(PO4). Sorry for the error and thanks for the correction!
@@richardlouiechemistrylectures These videos are really amazing. Your lectures make these concepts seem easy even when they would be hard to wrap your head around reading from the book.
Thank you very much!