i have a question and im not trying to be silly this is serious to me . has anyone tried to do electrolisis through a vitrol souloution using a base oil as cat. in other words has anyone been able to do electrolisis through a oil solution? please only serious responses . coz im curious .
I did read somewhere once; something like "that since all nitrate salts are soluble in water, it is not possible to detect the presence of the nitrate ion by a precipitatiuon reaction." This does not make sense to me as tests can be performed on salts of (chlorides, sulfites, sulfates, carbonates, hydrogencarbonates), by a precipatation reactions, and all of which ARE soluble.
Its still an over-methodological representation of the actual phenomena. In order to be practical, your abstraction has got to be better deeper and more intergrated than that. In real life, in order to solve problems, you not just have to know your science but also have some creative lead you know? That is why i dont like over-methodological approaches. There are many things here that by right should be logically deducible and self-evident but made into an over-methodological pedagogical model.
may be... BUT without methodology we still would have been in the time before science, in the time of natural philosophy, where you sit at table and discuss theory and later observing a phenomenon - not combining your theory to practice, progress craves rigor !
In the following reaction to test for the presence of Cl ions: AgNO3 + NaCl => AgCl + ( ), what goes in the space. I mean what happens to the NO3- & the Na+ ????
36:44 "These people are such sissies!!"
39:27 "It's very girly! I dont like this, I dont like this!"
LOLOLOL!!!
d1drifter87 1 week ago
This guy is bad ass at writing on a black board!!
d1drifter87 1 week ago
wonderful!!!
live4Cha 6 months ago
this guy is awesome :O
he fucking ROCKS!
MarkoJ1990 9 months ago
i have a question and im not trying to be silly this is serious to me . has anyone tried to do electrolisis through a vitrol souloution using a base oil as cat. in other words has anyone been able to do electrolisis through a oil solution? please only serious responses . coz im curious .
saint27573 11 months ago
This has been flagged as spam show
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madavhelen 1 year ago
My last name is Balmer yay!
AJLegofan 1 year ago
"This is it." Professor you are MIT's Michael Jackson. I solute your superb lecture.
positiveflow1 1 year ago 3
I did read somewhere once; something like "that since all nitrate salts are soluble in water, it is not possible to detect the presence of the nitrate ion by a precipitatiuon reaction." This does not make sense to me as tests can be performed on salts of (chlorides, sulfites, sulfates, carbonates, hydrogencarbonates), by a precipatation reactions, and all of which ARE soluble.
1091Floyd21 1 year ago
Does anyone know what year of the course this is, as some of the theory he is teaching I have learnt at A level
lloydteddy 2 years ago
Its still an over-methodological representation of the actual phenomena. In order to be practical, your abstraction has got to be better deeper and more intergrated than that. In real life, in order to solve problems, you not just have to know your science but also have some creative lead you know? That is why i dont like over-methodological approaches. There are many things here that by right should be logically deducible and self-evident but made into an over-methodological pedagogical model.
NoArbitraryImpose 2 years ago
Comment removed
gomunkul 1 year ago
This has been flagged as spam show
may be... BUT without methodology we still would have been in the time before science, in the time of natural philosophy, where you sit at table and discuss theory and later observing a phenomenon - not combining your theory to practice, progress craves rigor !
gomunkul 1 year ago
@NoArbitraryImpose Maybe it's just over-methodological pedagogical to you. "Over-methodological pedagogical" is in the eye of the beholder
brianmenendez 1 year ago
In the following reaction to test for the presence of Cl ions: AgNO3 + NaCl => AgCl + ( ), what goes in the space. I mean what happens to the NO3- & the Na+ ????
1091Floyd21 1 year ago
@1091Floyd21 maybe you will have white AgCl ^ ^ and 1 mol [Na+] and [NO3]- , supposed to be NaNO3.. or to be ionized in solution
sobicodamian 7 months ago
Thanks, although I studied this stuffs a lot, but I learned watching these videos.
Well done.
hopefu20 2 years ago
THIS ROCKED. Favorite. GO CHEM
zapo147 2 years ago 5
He does a good job, but he neglects some goo d details' good overall.
jcbmack 2 years ago
Annoying camera angles!
sexdrugsRnR 2 years ago
This has been flagged as spam show
If you watch this you WILL kill yourself.
IveGotBallsOfSt33l 3 years ago
This has been flagged as spam show
omg, this was boring.......
xmikaulitzx 3 years ago
Then dont watch. People like you are ignorant.
samn100 2 years ago
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this is freking long
PeriodicLife 3 years ago
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the teacher looks nervous?
or is he in hurry?
maveslbs 3 years ago
No, he's just hyped because chemistry is so cool. Yes, I'm a chem nerd.
LiiMuRi 3 years ago 12
Right on! Follow the passion!
BuddyNovinski 2 years ago
@LiiMuRi yes, im a nerd chem too. but i'm from argentina. so fuck your atoms there, i will fuck my atoms here. see ya man
sobicodamian 7 months ago