Sal, I've been a student of yours for a couple years now and I appreciate all your videos so much!!! I believe you made a mistake, it should be "methyl isopropyl ether" because the "iso" prefix does not count towards the alphabetical order.
Pretty funny watching this when you're german but gladly the names are very similar to our german ones.. I couldn't find a german vid for that theme at all but you're doin a great job! I understood everything
i really like your videos....they are very helpful to my students to understand better on the nomenclature of organic compounds..hope u can post more...
2-ethoxyethane doesn't exist because you would start numbering by making the group the smallest number it can be. So it would be 1 since there is only 2 carbons on that parent ethane chain.
actually it does...he wrote in the first video that he used the iso name that he made a mistake. and not just he said it its true. the prefixes that refer to the number it substituted by like sec-, and tert- DO NOT count but iso- is part of the name so it does count.
Shouldn't it be {methyl isopropyl ether}? I prefer the IUPAC nomenclature even though the common names flow off the tongue easier. I saw this one, Cl-C=O(Cl) , on a test once and was asked to give its common name for bonus points. Answer = Carbonyl Chloride.
iso and cyclo count. iso and cyclo are part of the name... where to you guys get this from (cyclo designates the shape without that wed assume it to be a straight chain....plz read Iupac rules before commenting and stop trying to confuse people
No it shouldn't because that side chain is only two in length and so it doesn't matter what carbon its attached too, it will always be carbon 1. As it can only be 1 in this case, you could actually just say ethoxyethane.
pi like no, you always want to achieve the lowest number. The 1 in this case is actually redundant since the ethoxy group may only be attached to the 1-C-atom, since Ethane is only made up of 2 Carbons.
I would pay so much money to take an Org-chem class from Khan. So much! Very helpful, thanks a lot.
Sal, I've been a student of yours for a couple years now and I appreciate all your videos so much!!!
I believe you made a mistake, it should be "methyl isopropyl ether" because the "iso" prefix does not count towards the alphabetical order.
Thank you so much! currently taking an online biochem class, and being able to see you work this out has been life-saving. thank you again.
Thank you for teaching..now a days teaching become free because of you started this way first..god bless you
(1:00) ^o^ The Emoji Movie won't stop taunting me with its existence.
lol
thank you so much... tomorrow i have a test and it helped a lot😂
this guy saved my life thanks! xD
Pretty funny watching this when you're german but gladly the names are very similar to our german ones.. I couldn't find a german vid for that theme at all but you're doin a great job! I understood everything
Same with French
Thanks a million .
Khan- you should clarify that ethers can do hydrogen bonds with water. They just can't do hydrogen bonding with other ethers.
Thank you so much, i didn't understand anything before this video. Now it seems so easy. Brilliant.
I have a final tomorrow, and I think this just saved me from a lot of derping.
Nice video .. thank you so much 💙
love it! (as much as one can love organic chem... But this is a great review for my final coming in two three days
after struggling in class for a day you just helped me in just 10 min
Thanks u for well explanation
Isn't it just ethoxyethane at 3:30? I mean 2-ethoxyethane and 1-exthoxyethane is the same thing?
ýes,it is
2 years later haha... Wow.. Chemistry was a long time ago for me...
+Jon 93 ahahahahahahahahahahaha
yes
iupac actually looks like tupac lol
Stfu
lol
I'm you
Are you alive?
@@thjim3157still breathing air and bleeding red brother
Very well explained! 🎉 😊
Keep do it ❤❤
i really like your videos....they are very helpful to my students to understand better on the nomenclature of organic compounds..hope u can post more...
2-ethoxyethane doesn't exist because you would start numbering by making the group the smallest number it can be. So it would be 1 since there is only 2 carbons on that parent ethane chain.
@AG013
it's still helpfull, becouse u don't need just to learn it to pass test and forget, you need to learn it and to remember)
Superb explained 👍
Thanks! I have a test next week and this helped me out so much :]
Are you alive?
Thank you very much, you don't how much this helped me :)
actually it does...he wrote in the first video that he used the iso name that he made a mistake. and not just he said it its true. the prefixes that refer to the number it substituted by like sec-, and tert- DO NOT count but iso- is part of the name so it does count.
Thank Sir!
i enjoyed this vid
Thanks! Very informative.
Very nice information
Thanks a lot 🌹
is there a comma between propoxy cyclohexane?
At school, we always use the IUPAC method.. and this writing is not what I'm used to :/ Though, it was really helpfull!
thanks a lot!!!
fantastic job
Shouldn't it be {methyl isopropyl ether}? I prefer the IUPAC nomenclature even though the common names flow off the tongue easier. I saw this one, Cl-C=O(Cl) , on a test once and was asked to give its common name for bonus points. Answer = Carbonyl Chloride.
Y r The best
Good teaching
oh ok, thanks for clarifying that.
Nice video
One question: for "isopropylmethylether", where do we put the blank space? Is it actually "isopropylmethyl ether" or "isopropyl methyl ether"?
You Asian girl?
Shouldn't it be "Methyl isopropyl ether"??
Because iso is not included while naming in alphabetical order.
iso and cyclo count. iso and cyclo are part of the name... where to you guys get this from (cyclo designates the shape without that wed assume it to be a straight chain....plz read Iupac rules before commenting and stop trying to confuse people
biochem86 i was looking for this comment , thanks alot
shouldn't it be sec propyl methyl ether?
since its connected to the carbon that is connected to two other carbons?
shouldn't it be 2-ethoxyethane since it's on carbon #2 not the methyl carbon?
No it shouldn't because that side chain is only two in length and so it doesn't matter what carbon its attached too, it will always be carbon 1. As it can only be 1 in this case, you could actually just say ethoxyethane.
where do the names come from and how do I know which ones to use?? I normally like Khan Academy but this video did not help.
It reminds me of the Batman logo, so in the exam all I have to remember is
dananananananananananananananana
Ethers!
This video restored 50 MP!
Wouldn't 1-ethoxyethane be the same as 2-ethoxyethane?
can someone please tell me why i cant hear any sound? this has happened on a few videos now
#44
“I don't care for perchloroethylene and I don't like glycol, ether."
Legendas em Português disponíveis!
0:28 omg, a bird!
Shouldn't esters end with- oate?
Yes. But esters and ethers are two completely different functional groups so they'd have different naming systems.
Thank you
it should not be methyl isopropyl...i comes before m. if anyone says it should they dont know IUPAC
biochem86 this is not biochem
how do you name it when there are 2 oxygen in an ether?
if the two oxygen are together it isn't a ether.
its not ether.. its ester
Are gonna do the Phenols? Lol what am I even asking, you did this 7 years ago.
isnt it 2- ethoxyethane at 3:13
pi like no, you always want to achieve the lowest number. The 1 in this case is actually redundant since the ethoxy group may only be attached to the 1-C-atom, since Ethane is only made up of 2 Carbons.
1-ethoxyethane?
the "1" is useless and can be omitted ...
🎉
i wanna make beats :(
Lol that first compound looks like a face, ^o^
^o^
Good video