What a breath of fresh air it is to have a tutor such as you! You maintain your composure so well and present any and all necessary information succinctly and without fail.
You are such a life saver with these videos. I hope your pillow stays cold, you never hit a red light, your food stays fresh, and you always find money laying around ❤
Professor Organic Chemistry Tutor, thank you for an outstanding explanation of the difference between Polar Covalent Bonds, Nonpolar Covalent Bonds and Ionic Bonding in AP/General Chemistry. The metals and nonmetals along with the electronegativity values show how to determine the different types of Chemical Bonds. This is an error free video/lecture on TH-cam TV with the Organic Chemistry Tutor.
Frank KeyK Whether it's highschool or college teachers don't seem to grasp this information well enough to concisely convey it to students in a way that promotes pragmatic and fundamental comprehension of the subject matter. I feel your pain bruh!
It's 2022 about 4 years seems the release of ur video and really no matter how many years has passed it still helps as much so for the mellionth time thanks
For anyone confused about ionic (with charge) vs covalent bonds and why a polar covelent bond isn’t ionic it’s because all are non metals - this was not explained fully in the video otherwise great job
I want to ask a question, when he said that we can identify the most polar by knowing that the two elements are far apart in the period table , but how we know that? How can we know that??
Because of the difference in electronegativity, atoms in the periodic table are sorted horizontally by the amount of protons they have -> increasing electronegativity. The more protons there are in the nucleus the harder they pull on electrons and thereby increasing their polarity
Thank God &thanks a lot u r a good explainer May God bless u I would love 2 see u making a video of an introduction 2 the chemical bonds in general pls & have nice life
So no matter what we have to have access to a periodic table. Is there no way to calculate electronegativity with out the values given on the periodic table?
In part A of question 2, why is the As-F bond more polar than the N-F bond? When I found the difference of F and As and N respectively as you did in example b, N was more polar.
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What a breath of fresh air it is to have a tutor such as you! You maintain your composure so well and present any and all necessary information succinctly and without fail.
Youre a lifesaver, i hope the best comes to your life
Your videos make everything easier from chem to calc. You're a life saver
You are such a life saver with these videos. I hope your pillow stays cold, you never hit a red light, your food stays fresh, and you always find money laying around ❤
Literally every one of his videos has wholesome comments and of course he deserves it
Professor Organic Chemistry Tutor, thank you for an outstanding explanation of the difference between Polar Covalent Bonds, Nonpolar Covalent Bonds and Ionic Bonding in AP/General Chemistry. The metals and nonmetals along with the electronegativity values show how to determine the different types of Chemical Bonds. This is an error free video/lecture on TH-cam TV with the Organic Chemistry Tutor.
Studying this during quarantine. Your videos never fail to make things easier!
I feel like I’m paying just to take exams and get a grade. Because most of my professors are horrible
Then don’t.
@@Helloknight You clearly have issues.
Frank KeyK Whether it's highschool or college teachers don't seem to grasp this information well enough to concisely convey it to students in a way that promotes pragmatic and fundamental comprehension of the subject matter. I feel your pain bruh!
Here in 2021.....still the best chemistry teacher❤👏🏆📚🖋
It's 2022 about 4 years seems the release of ur video and really no matter how many years has passed it still helps as much so for the mellionth time thanks
For anyone confused about ionic (with charge) vs covalent bonds and why a polar covelent bond isn’t ionic it’s because all are non metals - this was not explained fully in the video otherwise great job
Thank you for making everything simple and easy to understand.
I want to ask a question, when he said that we can identify the most polar by knowing that the two elements are far apart in the period table , but how we know that? How can we know that??
Because of the difference in electronegativity, atoms in the periodic table are sorted horizontally by the amount of protons they have -> increasing electronegativity. The more protons there are in the nucleus the harder they pull on electrons and thereby increasing their polarity
You just saved my life thanks!!!
thank youuuuu i actually learned stuff. im so happyy
Hi babe
Great video with very simple steps to determine polarity of certain bonds ..
Thanks man!! You're really good!!
thank you ,i love your channel,i have subscribed to you
U r the best
Thank you for these videos, you always help me
So helpful
This helped so much! Thank u!
You are the Best!
Thank God &thanks a lot u r a good explainer May God bless u I would love 2 see u making a video of an introduction 2 the chemical bonds in general pls & have nice life
In fact, you are training nation builder
The best ever. Thanks
Your a life saver
actual W person, here from Ms. Tang's class
So no matter what we have to have access to a periodic table. Is there no way to calculate electronegativity with out the values given on the periodic table?
Best of the best
you're great thank you
All in one means you❤❤
In part A of question 2, why is the As-F bond more polar than the N-F bond? When I found the difference of F and As and N respectively as you did in example b, N was more polar.
thank you!
No "In this video" I'm so sad right now. :(
good shit dude.
nice explanation
Thank u so much man! Really helps a lot
THANK YOU
is there a way to identify nonpolar vs polar when you don't have electronegativity?
شكرًا ❤️
Is there probability to have ionic bond where the elements are both metal or non metal
Better than my teacher lol
Thaks
Finally.. a video that actually makes sense.
Crash course and that chemistry dude that looks like Jesus, are confusing.
What type of chemical bond will copper and zinc have?
It's been a year I know, but both Cu (copper) and Zn(zinc) are non-metals so the chemical bond will be covalent
Cu and Zn are metals
They have a metallic bond when in an alloy form
how alkaline 11.5 Ph water dissolves oil?
Hi, can I ask why CO2 is considered non polar?
dipoles in the linear CO2 molecule cancel each other out
@@jackscarce8570 thank you
marry me please thank you so much. you have no idea how happy I am I finally get it :D
2:50 yeah this reminds me of my GPA
يا ليت تكون مترجمة
😊😊
😃😃
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