H6T4R5
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Added: 4 years ago
From: bannanaiscool
Views: 13,896
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  • @14TINI The way I find the charges is by looking off of an Ion Sheet. It tells you all of the positive and negative charts. Look it up on google, you might be able to find one.

  • you are my absolute biggest hero right now

  • I am sorry but you lost me on the bit where you knew what the charges of Ba and SO4 were. How do you know that , or was I not paying attention? I just want to make sure I understant everything before I move on to the next stage. Thank you, you're a great teacher

  • barium sulfate is insoluble right

  • Right.

    Chemguy

  • i got a 96 on my exam

    ily

  • thanx human, i an now satisfied with the events i have just seen, and understanding the human way of balancing chemical equations, this way i can survive on this rusty planet, but neighter shall i give you the recipe for immortality!!!

  • Yeah, well immortality's over-rated...

    Chemguy

  • DANGG DUDE....ur an awsome teacher i wish i had u even if i had one mistake and u mark the whole question wrong..lol but ur cool...nd thnks cus like im doing my HW and i actually get it now thnks alot!!!!!

  • what is the chart that chemguy keeps on referring to?

  • thank you so much! you're really funny and a great teacher.

  • Thank you very much.

  • Thanks a lot, you make learning this so much easier with ur sense of humor! :D

  • ... That's alright; chemguy is Italian so he's allowed to do that! ... hahahah ; - )

    THANKS FOR ALL YOUR WORK AND EFFORT!!!

  • isent he half german to?! waht the hax is going on here?!

  • thanks! watched all 4 :)

  • heya, thnx for teaching uszese chemical equations!!< i got exam tomorrow and i never understood it, z teacher dnt explain clearly like u!!, too boring class, well i really appreciated z way u explained it!< i tried it and i got z answers , thnx for preventing me from failing lolxxxx

  • he is so much better then my chem teacher. i think i actually learned something

  • ur ass should've been studying weeks ago instead of trying to do it now!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • Many thanks to you, Mr Chemguy, from a to be a biochemist undergraduate(1 year to go until college though).

    Sincerely yours, (excuse my account name:D)

  • thanks man you are so good. I learn so much! keep up the good job.

  • According to my activity series, iodine is below bromine, so how is it able to displace the bromine?

  • MistrEgg, I asked myself the same question. Bromine is more electro negative than the iodine and so according to what I know it shouldn't be possible.

    At least not in those conditions.

  • This Guy Is Good I Learned More With Him Than My Own Teacher

  • o my gooooooood

    its so easy.. if only my chem teacher would know how to explain it !!! jaja

  • chemguy you are the man

  • thanks so much i watched all the videos and i think i get it now i wish u were my teacher

  • tanks man, im irish so i do a differant cource, but was still a help.

  • thank you soo much I understand it now

  • THANK you sooooo much, these videos saved my life on my test.

  • o my thx i get this now

  • Thanks. Just look at the coefficient in front of the sodium nitrate to see that it has a two in front of the compound...2 sodium atoms and two nitrate ions are present! Hope that helps answer your previous post.

  • P.S my tutor is confusing she tends to skip back and forth and I cant feel her passion. Many many thanks from London UK. If I pass anything it will be because of your help and enthusiasm. Thank you Chemguy! THERES NEEDS TO BE MORE TUTORS LIKE YOURSELF!!

  • For the second reaction, isn't that a displacement reaction? Iodine is less reactive than bromine so there would be no reaction. Did i have any misconceptions?

  • Not at all! You are absolutely correct is saying that there would be no reaction. This is a nonspontaneous redox reaction, but it doesn't mean that it can't happen; zapped with an electrical current, the reaction can proceed. We can still write a balanced equation for it, though (and should).

  • not to forget, you saved me from my chem exam, only studied 1 day for an entire course but with your help i had nothing to loose, thanks

  • oh man, this guy is great, reminds of a groucho marx with italian accent, where's the cigar?

  • What's the reason for migrating the SO4 together and not (possibly) separating them?

    [Perhaps due to charges; though without a chart on hand it's unusually difficult to find that out, unless ChemGuy has a companion website with the appropriate charts! (EXTREMELY helpful!)]

    PS... my GAWD you put most of my teachers to dust!, except for Mr. Clintberg (4 years ago) who taught my Grade 12 Physics 30 in Edmonton; ironic that you live so close!, perhaps you've even met on teaching excursions! ^^

  • I less than 3 u ...

    I <3 u

  • please upload some videos on organic chemistry.

  • cool

  • THANK YOU!!!

  • Thanks so much your awesome at explaining it.

    You do a better job than my teacher by far.

    I hope your students appreciate you!

    Thanks A Million!

  • thanx for making chemistry FUN

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