Added: 3 years ago
From: tdewitt451
Views: 37,709
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  • Comment removed

  • thank u SIR!

  • thanks, it helped me :)

  • YES! Thank you man! My teacher was teaching us this + I didn't get that crap at all, lol. Saved my life tbh

  • Thank you so much! I understand it now! God bless you sir. The world need's more people like you :D

  • you're amazing! thanks so much! i now know the reason behind the boyle's law instead of simply memorizing! thanks for the awesome explanation!

  • oh god i love you, my chemistry teacher has named me the child left behind /pfffft

    NOT ANYMORE! >:D

  • @NamiNomiCupcakeStar don't listen to teachers like that, seriously. i've got tons of videos on other stuff too, so please check out my channel. i'm so happy you find this helpful. and please let me know if you'd like to see videos on a a particular topic, or if you have questions.

  • thankss alooottttttt helped alooottt

  • Is anyone else reminded of Reid from Criminal Minds? :) Anyways, if only my teacher would explain it this way.... so helpful! Thank you :)

  • OMG! I WAS SO SCARED THAT I WAS GONNA FAIL THIS 9 WEEKS BECAUSE I DONT HAVE A CLUE WHAT MY TEACHER EVER SAYS! THANK YOU SO MUCH! YOU MAKE IT SEEM SO SIMPLE!

  • My science teacher really likes this video and your one on Charles's law... watching this was my homework tonight! thank you so much for making it understandable... you remind me of the khan academy guy.

  • You are amazing!

    Keep it up, you have no idea of how much you have helped me pass my course:)

  • This is brilliant, Thankyou!

  • This makes so much more sense. I have a horrible teacher that has probably been doing this as long as you have been alive. Thanks for making it understandable

  • Awesome sir! Make some more videos... I would appreciate u if u make video on polar nonpolar shape

  • You teach me in 5 minutes what my teacher tries to teach me in 44...

  • I live in South Africa and I have a Science final tomorrow morning, untill this video, I did not understand, now i have it in the bag. You single handedly saved my high school career

  • I almost gave up learning this one. You're awesome Sir! Thank you!

  • You're too cute to be this smart.

  • You are a great teacher !!! Greetings from Nepal !!!

  • I LOVE U!!!, great teacher! thanks :)

  • Didn't he used drive the General Lee.

  • Great video! thanks! i need you as my chemistry teacher!

  • thank you ! that guy is hot btw

  • thank u sir it was awsome and relly helpfull

  • great explanation thank you! :)

  • Amazing!!!I I got it...Thank you sooooo much

  • loads of help, but wat if u have kPa

  • @Jameses213 it doesn't matter what pressure units you have, the equation works exactly the same way. HOWEVER, both P1 and P2 must have the same units!!! so they can both be kPa, or both be atm, or both mmHg, or whatever. but you CANNOT have P1 be in atm and P2 be in kPa. if both P1 and P2 aren't in the same units, you'll need to convert one so they're the same. i have a video on gas pressure conversions. does that make sense?

  • Thanks for this! Helps a lot. Keep it up man!

  • THANK YOU!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!­!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • thanks, a lot. :P But, um, where's the more complex boyle's law you mentioned? :D I couldnt find it.. :(

  • my teacher made it sound all complex.

    thanks for simplifying it! REALLY HELPED!

  • this helped alot! thanks!

  • Thanks so much for your videos covering the gas laws, its finally making sense!

  • omigod! thank you sooo much! you are sooo much better than my science teacher~ plus u look better ;) haha

  • Helpful*

  • Thanks so mutch really hey helpfull

  • Comment removed

  • amazin video it was really helpful

  • thx a lot helped tremendously

  • you are a chemistry god. <3

  • thank you, i need to know this for a test on the respiratory system. it makes sense now.

  • dont you have to convert atm to kPa?

    so 1atm = 101.3kPa

  • @laniipop why would you convert to kPa? as long as BOTH pressures are in the SAME units, you're fine. here, they are both in atm. we'd also be OK of they were BOTH in kPa, or mmHg, or anything else. the problem starts when they're in different units. then you would have to convert one so that they're in the same units. but it doesn't matter which pressure units you use, as long as BOTH are the same. make sense?

  • @tdewitt451

    yes, thankyou,

    im pretty sure your videos helped me pass my test today :D

  • @tdewitt451 oh that helped i thought i need to convert all conversions to atm before i start

  • Thanks you so much!!! I had truoble learning this in my chem class.

  • sir my qustion is that boyles law state that " volume is invesaly proporational to pressure at constant temparature"ok

    if we exart pressure on a gas cylinder then the gas molecules collide with each other then temperaure is increase than how the tem; is constant..........

  • Hosently you have a great way of making things so easy and clear!!!! I could be in heaven right now, thaks!!!!

    Please continue to do these videos!!!! Woot!!! Woot!!!

  • Thank you so much~ ^w^

  • Very helpful thanks!!!

  • this totally saved my ass on my Chem homework!! Thanks sooo much for posting it!!! :D

  • @mrcol100 just checking with you am looking for P2 so i have dun as follows P1xV1 divide V2 = P2 = 120kPa have i under stud it right?...

  • Thanks for the refreshers! This will be helpful for the NLN Pax test. ~Summer

  • awesome explanation...thanx buddy...

  • a very good example of how a good teacher changes lives..thanks... by the way do u have any dedicated site where i can find videos of yours?????

  • u made it so easy to undersand:-) thanx

  • AMAZING!! THANK YOU SOOOOO MUCH!

  • Great job! My teacher makes it seem really hard. This will help me pass my final coming up.

  • well said... you'd make a great teacher

  • this was amazing, thank you sooooo much! my teacher took 2 months to teach this to our class, but i learned it here in 20 minuets

  • @tdewitt451  agree

  • Hi

    I am a science teacher in the UK and find you Youtube vids fantastic. You seem able to explain things in a direct and understandable way for the Kids

    Dr N Millward

  • you did good son

  • thank you, thank you, thank you

  • Thanks for the post man, this is really helpful.

    You ROCK!

  • Thanks :D This helps me a lot ! You explained it so clearly.

    Great Job!

  • helped a lot !!!!!!!!!

  • @tdewitt451 Thank you!! Your videos are exceptionally helpful!!

  • Thank you for helping me understand the gas laws. Your videos are very helpful!!

  • Great! Thanks for sharing.

  • your video is very very helpful! im studying physics of respiratory physiology and i m so confused .. do u have other videos related ? thanks :)

  • thank you. thank you. thank you :D

  • wow guy =D you should teach! made is seem way easier than my teacher! haha

  • Being new to all this your very helpful. Thank you very much!!!

  • Thanks a lot! Using this vid as a source for my project, kay? :)

  • are you a teacher, if yr not you should become one

  • Hey this really helps i have a test on this tomarrow. your vids saved my life. haha thankx. (:

  • Comment removed

  • tnx :) using your vids. to do advance studying really helps :D tnx!

  • Wow! You Explained me somthing I've been studying for almost 3hrs! Dude please ( If Possible) explaine other laws. I will definitly pass!

  • oh yay! (: i've spent all day researching Boyle's law and could nearly find 1/7 questions. You answered all mine in not even 6 minutes! you are a very good teacher! i'll be watching more of your videos to help me with my physics! :D

  • dude thanks this is rly helpfull

    i have a test tomorrow and i think ill pass it cuz of u

    thanks bud keep up the good work

  • thanks for your comment! i really appreciate hearing that my videos are helpful. i hope you get an A on your test, and message me if you have any questions this video didn't answer.

  • i did !

  • OMG! Thank you so much

    You are an awesome teacher..please come to my school and replace our teachers

    You really made me understand it

    I am sure i will ace that test thanks to you.♥

  • DUDE i LOVE you I really apreciate it !!!!!!!!!!!! Thank you so Much

  • I think I love this guy!

  • OMGEEE! tnks so much! I got a 97 on my chem test! The three pts i missed we simple calculation errors...anyway tnks so much! NOW i have an A for the quarter thanks to you!

  • great job! i'm so glad to hear that! thanks for the comment, too!

  • Hey are you going to make something about the combined gas law?

  • what's in it for me?

  • Whats all these videos in for you?

  • i'm just kidding. i'd make one, but i'm on vacation for a while. if you have specific questions, send me a youtube message.

  • i was having such a hard time understanding chemistry but you make it so easy for anyone to understand!! thanks!!!

  • thank you so much. this really helped me a lot

  • hehe tnx a lot i passed our long quiz in chemstry because of this video =)... and not only did i pass i only got 5 mistakes ;)

  • thanks so much! i love to hear comments like this!

  • Hi! I'm from Australia & we are currently studying the 'emission spectrum' 7 how BOHR's model in relation to how when you 'heat an element' the electrons get excited etc and move to different energy levels which emits light..however, im confused as in our next assessment prac we have to be able to draw the emission spectrum for a particular unknown gas..how do you know what emission spectrum matches what gas & vise versa? i hope that makes sense!Thank you, you are the god of science education!

  • gabby, thanks so much for your message. unfortunately, i don't quite understand what your teacher is asking you to. i mean, you've described it very well and it makes sense, but it's pretty much impossible to draw the emission spectrum for an unknown atom. hydorgen is the only atom that people really know. but i want to help you out. message me back and let me know more about your assignment.

  • wait a minute. what about ballons where you put air in and the pressure is getting higher and so it the volume right?

  • excellent question! you're very observant! balloons are a tricky example, because they're a little different: when the volume of a balloon goes up, we have to ADD more air (that's why you blow into it). in the examples that i talked about above, we're not adding any air: we have a set amount of gas that we're either squeezing into a smaller area or giving more room to. when you start talking about adding more air to something, to relationship gets a little trickier. does that make sense?

  • Comment removed

  • you see. im in 6th grade and we have to do an explination about if you put helium in a balloon, is it demonstrating the charles law or the boyles law and im confused. im guessing its boyles law because helium has nothing to do with temperature right?

  • Comment removed

  • i learned more from this then i did from 2 weeks in science class

  • seriously thank u so much! my teacher sucks so bad.

  • good boy?

  • very helpful .. great teaching style!! :) thnx for postin the video .. :)

  • Thanks for posting this video. It was very helpful.

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