Added: 3 years ago
From: kosasihiskandarsjah
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  • This vid is soo good my teacher MADE us use it in our homework.

  • This video is really helpful. I'm currently studying for a HUGE science test and I think I got it. Thanks!

  • so stoked on this video

  • SOMEONE PLEASE ANSWER

    I know that in an ionic bond the ions attract eachother due to electric forces.

    I know that in a metallic bond the metal atoms share each others electrons and that the electrons flow freely around each nucleus in the bond, thus allowing metal to give way to electricity.

    What I am wondering about in regards to covalent bonds is whether the molecules, be it H or O or whatever, bond due to electric forces or do they work the same way as in a metallic bond?

    THANKS

  • u really need to imagine chemistry.... this video is quite good :D

  • Technically, the electrons don't have well-defined paths. All you can do is use the Schrodinger equation to calculate the orbitals, and you then know that there's a 90% chance that the electron is somewhere in that orbital.

  • This shit is fucking gay

  • I don't get it.

  • @ThekEvOsLicE Rather have wrong spelling then be a sad person who can only get orgasms from correcting people.

  • Fuck chemistry

  • finals anyone?

  • fuck science

  • Yeah this section in chemistry annoyed me big time I was so lost

  • @TheAVERAX  same here

  • i'm a visual learner... exam's tomorrow. this is my studying!!

  • This pisses me the fuck off. His voice is gay

  • @killastefan Maybe your just dumb

  • @ZOMBIExDUBZ Maybe YOU'RE just dumb lol

  • This shit is ducking gay

  • thanks, this was very helpful :)

  • Hey guys

  • @KSIOlajidebtt i thought the were the real guy them i saw the double tt.

  • MHS boys: keep on studying, and get a good night's sleep on Monday night :)

  • Chlorine: (with a Prussian accent) Yo Sodium! How does it feel to have that atome taken away from you?!

    Give me thumbs if you watch Hetalia xD

  • @Shakiraiscool Sodium had it's only valence electron taken away, not an atom(e). Just sayin'

  • god bless america there's youtube or id fail my quizzes!

  • actually the shared electrons has to be a line ...

  • @DrownAway

    it is not actually...

  • @lovekibainuzuka eeehm it depends which way you choose to write it down, id prefer to write it down with the lewis-kind you can search the internet and you will see the pairs of electrons are shown as lines ...

  • thumps up for visual learning!

  • Ohhhh now I get it...

  • Wow, I can't believe it's that fast.

  • Visual learning is THE ONLY WAY!!!!! cuz now i understand

  • @CoDinformer do you even have any idea what the video was about. If you understand it, then you will realise that it is actually very helpful.

  • Makes so much more sense than my book :P

  • Thanks The Explaination is very very clear That My Teacher also couldn't Explain

    It Helped me

  • (Y) thanks man

  • It's spelled Ion

  • what is an anion ?

  • @jh0zzua909 its a negatively charged ion

  • great info here

  • gud video

  • @Smallkid92 oxygen needs 2 electrons to complete the outer shell and it doesn't have the power to just rip the one off of the hydrogen henceforth they share an electron making them more stable and forming a covalent bond I think.

  • Another way you could think of it is by shells, such as

    1st shell can hold 2 electrons

    2nd shell holds 8 electrons

    3rd shell holds 8 electrons

    4th shell holding 16 electrons and then 36 and so on.

    Sound stupid when i read it but its just the maximum configuration rule going on in this shiz. Anyway Good vid :)

  • Why would the hydrogen atom not give away the valence electron to form ionic bond? It's also possible to have a H- right?

  • The explanation is VERY CLEAR . Probably the best animation created to explain covalent and ionic bonding...5 thumbs up.

  • I love this one.

  • Natrium is the original latin name for the element thats why the symbol is Na same for copper the original latin name was Cuprus (or something similar) so its symbol is Cu.. the IUPAC methos of nameing elements and chemical equations uses the new names like sodium, potassium, lead, copper etc thats the one i believe is most commonly used especially in the states and in Australia .... hope that clarified it :)

  • SUCKKYYY!!!! make better one this one sucks and is stupid!

  • SUCKKYYY!!!!

  • Agree with genn

  • thank you man now i understand and can prepare for that test!@#@!!!

  • Thank you so much! This helped sooooooo much! I can do do my homework while actually knowing what I'm doing :)

  • thank youu!.. my dumb ass teacher doesnt kno how to spell it...

  • Does ionic bonding only occur when one atom has 1 valance electron and one has 7?

  • Still do t get it

  • ionic bond

    moar leik

    niggeric bond

    amirite?

  • so an ionic bond is when they are magnetically attracted to each other, and a covalent bond is when they share electrons?

  • @Fal1ingUp yes ;)

  • but how do i know if an element will do covalent bond or ionic bond?

  • @leotheloser if its bonding a non metal and a metal then it would be ionic otherwise covelant

  • MrEngineerNasa: Because Cl has 17p+(protons) and 17e-(electrons) and if he gets another electron he will be negativ get it?

    :)

  • @MrEngineerNasa

    the CL atom has more electronsthan protons once it gains on and thus becomes negative as there are more nagative charrges.

    @kosasihiskandarsjah thank you you calrified my doubt

  • why the fuck Cl beeng negative charge after he got 8 electrons, he shud be positiv charge as well well

  • Where else to go when all books failed? YouTube!!!!! Great job!

  • ok, but what about hydrogen, its octet is not complete, and so why not charged?

    and also i've read in a book that electrons always stay paired, but electrons are actually moving,, so what about that?

  • great and helpful vid thanks

  • Dude this is so confusing . You need to explain it better

  • The representation of the water molecule is inaccurate or misleading at the very least - there is a certain angle between the two hydrogen atoms and it should be indicated in the video.

  • This makes no sense to me. Why isnt the second example also an ionic bond? Why doesnt H lose its electron to O?

  • 2/2

    I picture 2 social groups ; social climbers who needs and maintain the companionship of one or two other people ( and a Strong person ( O ) defending weak people ( H ), H2O . While he does that, he feels self accomplishment and the other feels security for the protection ( stable ).

  • ½ Ionic bonding is like a Parasitic relationship, a parasite ( Cl ) takes all it needs without exchange for the host ( Na ). The host being understanding becomes +, the other -. Covalent bonding on the other hand is a mutual relationship.

  • @09205479428 If you think about it through, the so called parasite is doing a favour by taking the pesky electron that keeps the host from getting a full outer shell

  • @AlwaysAbiggerFish  from another perspective, Yes the " parasitism " can be justified.

  • uhhhh no..... nobody calls it natrium anymore, by the IUPAC nomenclature its sodium.

  • great animation very easy to understand

  • Nice and clear.

  • i like my chem teacher as well he shows us animations like this all the time so we learn faster

  • What better way to study for a chemistry test than youtube eh?

  • @rubiksman333 Fuck books. I learn better visually.

  • @luanswan2002 agree

  • 6 atoms then 7 atoms ehh why dont a get this?

    god mannnn am sooo thick lmao

    great vid though very colourful haha

  • OHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH­HHHH

  • YAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA VIDOE WAS GREAT!

    now i need help in percentage yieldlldldldldl and relative masssss.

  • this is awesome! tnx.

  • and about that covalent bond, which one becomes negativ and which one becomes positiv? the one most left of the perodic table becomes negativ??

  • omg soo better than my teacher ..thx man :D

  • lol? we just have to look at this video and we can understand. MOE is so inefficient. teach alot of crap without going t o the main point.

  • amazing! super helpful. my science teacher never explains it in a way that anyone can understand! THANKS! i <3 that u posted this on the day of my b-day! lol. well, not in 2008, but u get the point. ;)

  • I don't get it on the book or in class, but I get it on youtube because of the 3d.

    Thanks!

  • I don't get on the book or in class, but I get it on youtube because of the 3d.

    Thanks!

  • this video can teach better than my science teacher seriously x)

  • @draxilon12 i agree with u

  • @draxilon12 just shows that you have a lousy science teacher

    this video is good

    but I prefer my Chemistry teacher

  • @draxilon12 really ma teacher cant evn pronounce the words rightly :P

  • im still having trouble understanding this.

  • very helpful indeed..(:

  • All indians watching this VDO

    Shows Indians are the most studios !!!!!!!!!

  • That was really gud animation..

    Now I understood how covalent bonding takes place

  • My parents taught me this shit in elementary school. So easy.

  • This was extremely helpful to me and explained a lot! Though I thought it was strange when I turned on the transcribe audio captions and at the way beginning of the video it showed "I I think bombing occurs between two adams"

  • This video saved from failing in the test. Thanks a lot!!!

  • strongest bonds in the world are covalent.

    something to argue with your professor about.

    see diamonds.

  • Its the same as mine and this is the same 1:57

  • thanks for this video.  SPREAD KNOWLEDGE LIKE THIS TO LIGHT UP THE WORLD!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • this was really helpful! :O I have an SOL tomorrow morning and im trying to cram as much as i can :) and in the beginning with the sodium atom and clorien atom it made sodium cloride right?

  • I love the visual look! This helps me as I am more of a visual learner. Thx for the vid!

  • i'm still in 8th grade learning crap chemistry tht i learned in 6th, i love this stuff. Can't wait for more complex things to come in High-school, =)

  • woah,this is pretty helpful

  • this wuz so helpful, it helped me so much with ny homework!!thanks!!:)

  • cool i said

  • so great so colol this is good

  • ohhh i get it now!! thnx a lot! this really helped!

  • This may have put me to sleep but it explained it so i got my project finished, thanks =D

  • very clearly explained...thanks for uploading

  • thanks for sharing! I'm having sheer hell learning this stuff. The cartoons really help me xxx thanks

  • nice! thank you!

  • this video helped me alot thanks dude!

  • this is amazing ! now, i can really understand & remember the differences for ionic & covalent bonding. thanks :)

  • thank u so much!! :D

  • i luved this..its btr dan my teachers teaching

  • Wow, this definitely explained it better than my chem teacher. Or maybe i just suck at chem!(: haha. Thank you(:!

  • thank youu my 2nd/3rd quarter science test is tomorrow (:

  • Thanks this helped so much!

    I've got my science exam tomorrow and chemistry was my weakest subject.

  • thanks you tube can be helpfull for revision

  • Tomorrows My Chemistry Final Exam N This Helped Alot Maan ! Thanx ! ;p

  • this was so helpful; thank you (:

  • what's this have to do with james bond?

  • @herbalvegas, have you noticed the seven electrons? and the two hydrogen? .. if you read it, it becomes 007 .... or james bond 007 ..

  • I LOVE YOU

  • oh my gosh this helped so much!!

  • Interesting video!!

  • CHEERS THATS GOOD WORK

  • hey same with me!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • lol our teacher in chemistry told us to look at this video so that we could correct it theres about 3 mistakes in here

  • Sodium Chloride

  • Nice vid btw :) But "sodium"? Isn't is Natrium?

  • most European education will call it Natrium, while American education will call it Sodium. they are both the same, natrium is the latin word for Sodium. it just depends where you live..then you will call it different.

  • @de2isme but some places like here in asia...ppl usually say sodium...we asian also dont remember the asian names

  • @mahnoor335 I think it depends which part of Asia. if i'm not mistaken, some parts of Asia will say Sodium, and some parts will say Natrium (I grew up in Asia, and in my country we say Natrium). i don't think we have the asian names . it doesn't really matter how you call it. they are the same chemical elements with different names. and the same goes for Kalium (latin name) and Potassium.

  • @de2isme yeah right...they r same elemnt...

  • @de2isme 

  • @de2isme

    No, we call it Sodium as well (:

  • @de2isme i could of gone my whole life not knowing that

  • this actualyy helps

  • Great animation.

    Simple. Fast.

    To-the-point.

    5 stars

  • THANK YOU!

  • Comment removed

  • tx a lot,im malaysian student

  • where did you get the animation, it's so cool and so easy to understand. Thank you so much.

  • we are studying them at sc`hool..

    I love this lesson very much!

  • oxygen doesnt have a 2.8.6 configuration oxygen has a 2.6 electron configuration. brainybones get ur facts right....

  • no proof atoms; however chemistry is fun.

  • the second one looks like a polar covalent bond because it has unequal sharing of electrons.

  • meaning it has 2 in its first shell, 8 in its second and 6 in its third. It needs 2 more electrons to form a complete shell and be in a "noble gas configuration".

  • your right, the atomic number does display the number of protons (and thus the number of electrons) of an uncharged atom. Electrons around an atom however, form "shells", which is groups of electrons floating around at a certain distance from the nucleus. Each shell must contain a certain number of electrons for it to be complete, then the next shell is formed. The first shell contains 2 electrons, the second shell contains 8 and then the third shell also needs 8 (or 18).Oxygen has a 2.8.6config

  • this just completed my homework :)

  • LIAR

  • LMAOROFL

  • i need a video that goes into more detail

  • It is really this simple though man :)

  • thx its help me

  • Covalent bonding is when one atom has not enough strength to remove the electron from the other atom. Therefore these atoms share their electrons to achieve stable electronic configuration. Oxygen has 6 valance electrons (meaning "extra" electrons) while hydrogen has 1. When one hydrogen atom bonds with 1 oxygen atom, their EC is 7, which means it still has yet to achieve a stable EC. Thus, 1 more hydrogen atom is needed to make the EC 8 =>making it stable.

  • how does oxygen only have 6 electrons i thought its atomic number displayed how many electrons it has??

  • Ionic bonding occurs between metals and non-metals and is basically the transfer of electrons from one to another to achieve a stable configuration. However this only occurs if one of the atom has sufficient strength to remove the electron from another.

  • i think O & H the bond between them is: hydrogen bon !!!!!

    C & C covalen bond

    Na & Cl inoic bond

  • all western are weak at sci n maths.boo

  • This Video Has The "DUHHH!" Factor.

  • AHH I get it now :]

  • this is very helpful, thanks :]

  • this helped me with my homework

  • i didnt understand a single word you fucking said

  • F Kentucky

  • this covalent is exactly the same as ionic irs confusing

  • No It isnt, Ionic is Where an electron is removed from another, and the opposites are attracted to each other,

    Covalent is where an atom cant take an electron because it isnt strong enough to so they share,

    Like 2 people wanting the sme thing, if one of them is strong enough, they will use force to take it.

  • I am afraid I still do not get the Cpvalent bonding part.

  • thank you for posting this!! Helped me aloot

  • you know the moment when you understand something?that just happened with this video

  • Thanks my chemistry teacher has been talking about this for a week or two and i do not get it, but i watch a 2 min video and understand wow.

  • thank 4 this post now i can pass the chemistry subject 4 sure!!!!!!!!!!!!