"That's propane right there. Well there's your.. and now we have an ETHYL group ready to attach as a branch on something else, how clever is that." =)))
@guysovereign Thanks for the incredible videos! I paid the donation to access your website, but I could not find the organic chemistry 2 videos; they only go through Organic Chemistry 1, it seems...Am I missing something?
@guysovereign Thanks for the incredible videos! I paid the donation to access your website, but I could not find the organic chemistry 2 videos; they only go through Organic Chemistry 1, it seems...Am I missing something?
I just wanna say thanks for these vids, I went on the Internet to get some help with my homework and i stumbled across this vid and it really helped + it made me laugh.
thank you so much for posting these! i have a terrible chem teacher who goes way too fast and makes me hate the subject, but your videos are informative and entertaining! you are saving my 9th grade chem grade right now, thanks!
Hi chemguy, you said proton of 1 is attracted to electron of 2, resulting LD forces. I am confused. Doesn't [electron of 1 and 2] nearer to each other and therefore wins, in terms of electrical forces? In other words, it is repelling instead of attracting.
Those repulsive forces do come into play when the molecules get too close...but initially the attractive forces are significant enough to draw them together!
Sorry, I am still not convinced. Based on the equation of electrical force, F= KQq/r^2. The nearer both charges, the more potent the forces. So, it is impossible for the attractive force to outwin the repulsive force, regardless of any distance.
Well, it does depend where those negative are at any one time, doesn't it? Since the electrons aren't as "fixed" as the protons are, perhaps their "movement" in orbitals causes proton-electron attractions to be more significant than e-e or p-p repulsions at any given instant.
Anyway, it's all electrostatic interaction for sure, cuz it ain't gravitational attraction (that Gmm/r2 wouldn't be in the attractive ballpark!)
So, you are saying that For example: electrons of molecule 1 moves to the left side of the molecule, causing a temporary dipole - causing the right side to be delta+. Then at the same time, electron of molecule 2 is at the left side, causing the left to be delta -. Then they attract! Is that what you mean? By the way, HoHoHo~ Merry christmas.
So, you are saying that For example: electrons of molecule 1 moves to the left side of the molecule, causing a temporary dipole -- ie right side become delta +. Then at the same time, electron of molecule 2 is at the left side, causing the left to be delta -. Then they attract! Is that what you mean? By the way, Merry christmas =D
i actually laughed when the hydrogen fell off the ethane becoming an ethyl group. i just read that in my text and understood it when it happened. hahahaha nerding out is fun.
Iv'e learned more from this guy in 15 minutes than I have in 4 hours of chemistry classes at school. He makes it so much fun, but also very interesting and educational all at the same time. We need more teachers like him. XD
depends on your local education system and your teacher I guess. But yeah our chemistry 2 and AP chem in high-school here in MS even teaches you up to this point in organic, though AP concentrated more on general chemistry.
I just took your renert diploma course this weekend and I can honestly say you are the best teacher I have ever had. You kept the class interesting and I learned more in those 3 days than I learned over the past year. Awesome work!
This is great. As a mature student (46) taking my foundation exam tomorrow, I am confident that I will at least get the chemistry marks (who cares about the physics). My Chem lecturer is great but this makes it all so much clearer. Thanks Chemguy!
I really like the way you speak. It immerses me in the lecture. Unfortunately, I got lost when you started with technical terms that I never heard of. I never took chem in college :(
Van der Waal's forces are LDF and dipole-dipole interactions; LDF is the only way nonpolars bond, and d-d is the way that polars bond (though they have LDF interactions, too!)
your a reallllly realllly good teacher....It's like better and faster then lecture....I never get bored when understanding your videos.... 5 stars for sure..
Thanks for the videos. I wish I had found them earlier. Keep up the great work.
Scandahuvian 2 months ago
This has been flagged as spam show
"That's propane right there. Well there's your.. and now we have an ETHYL group ready to attach as a branch on something else, how clever is that." =)))
IT FEELS GREAT LAUGHING AT CHEMISTRY JOKES. HAHA.
Godspeed, sir! We need teachers like you!
o0gentlebreeze0o 2 months ago
Comment removed
o0gentlebreeze0o 2 months ago
hahaha 1:40
faidonoftheditoo 2 months ago
I wanna play with some stickys and ballies man!!!! hilarious great teacher
micheal561 6 months ago
@guysovereign Thanks for the incredible videos! I paid the donation to access your website, but I could not find the organic chemistry 2 videos; they only go through Organic Chemistry 1, it seems...Am I missing something?
tennisncereal 7 months ago
Thank you so much! I thought I was going to fail this class, but you gave me hope!
kangkyongsun 10 months ago
Eh, my teacher uses pens. She'll snatch them up from the people sitting at the front, and stick them in her hand at angles.....
Priosenne 11 months ago
This has been flagged as spam show
She will come to you tonight with special gift **rockmycity.info**
tonawaldschmidtnmd 11 months ago
Keep it up!!! You are better than all the chemistry teachers i had. May I ask is teaching your actual profession??
syrupticious 1 year ago 5
@syrupticious I am a chemistry teacher in Alberta, Canada!
Chemguy
bannanaiscool 1 year ago 5
@bannanaiscool hey what school do you teach in?? i'm a student in Alberta :D
samus18365 2 weeks ago
You are the most awesome teacher ive ever seen.
salahd7 1 year ago
hey u made organic chem sooo easy thnkuuuuu cn u pls teach me stoichiometry
hottynaughtychiya 1 year ago
i wish i had you as my teacher
ajeed1 1 year ago
These are great videos, but where is Organic Chemistry 2.
guysovereign 1 year ago
@guysovereign At my website!
Chemguy
bannanaiscool 1 year ago
@bannanaiscool where
do i have to pay for it
or wat
60fft 10 months ago
@guysovereign Thanks for the incredible videos! I paid the donation to access your website, but I could not find the organic chemistry 2 videos; they only go through Organic Chemistry 1, it seems...Am I missing something?
tennisncereal 7 months ago
Great vid!
tadelahrah 1 year ago
Great vid1
tadelahrah 1 year ago
lost consciousness. I'll get a chance to look at it again I hope. It looks like you're a good resource.
thoumaturgica 1 year ago
you are a great teacher~!!
JustDuetBeauty 1 year ago
wowwwwwwwwwwwwwww..............tnx it's very helpful
abcdefg999ify 1 year ago
Great Help, strong explanations,
thank you
coolhand2345454 1 year ago
Can u come teach in our school? PLEASE?
IVIanSour 1 year ago
u r the bst !!!
SaFoOy7 1 year ago
can you be my prof. please?! thanks for all your videos....they are of great help.
ng908074 1 year ago
Does anyone have the links to video 2/3 from this series please? I could only find 1, 4,5+, ta!
Clurrabella 1 year ago
BIG O-chem exam tom. and I have to say that you are one intelligent and charming fellow
moballer12 1 year ago
can i get a tshirt from you that says "stickies and ballies maan"
Deaky220 1 year ago 8
@Deaky220 LOL...Thats hella funny
moballer12 1 year ago
1:42 phail ! =D
thnx man nice vids keep 'em coming :)
qaddodi 1 year ago
How can you work out what the angles are please? I have never known how that is done. Thanks
wudgee 1 year ago
Nothing to work out. Just have to memorized them. Check out chemical bonding for help there!
Chemguy
bannanaiscool 1 year ago
U r better than my organic chem prof. u make learning interesting and animated
ogolie 1 year ago
Is LDF Wan Der Waals forces?
haloapa 1 year ago
Yep
Chemguy
bannanaiscool 1 year ago
@haloapa isnt it called idf as in induced dipoledipole forces
abdullahalmahmood 1 year ago
Hi Chemguy,
I just wanna say thanks for these vids, I went on the Internet to get some help with my homework and i stumbled across this vid and it really helped + it made me laugh.
Thanks once again!
stephene75 1 year ago
thank you so much for posting these! i have a terrible chem teacher who goes way too fast and makes me hate the subject, but your videos are informative and entertaining! you are saving my 9th grade chem grade right now, thanks!
jgalp1000 2 years ago
Your saving me for my exam ahaha, your videos rock!
Thanks chem guy!
DrewTheSkier 2 years ago 2
Why can't all teachers be like this guy. "I wanna play with some stickies and ballies" legend :D
DvooXdooD 2 years ago 6
2:27
Hi chemguy, you said proton of 1 is attracted to electron of 2, resulting LD forces. I am confused. Doesn't [electron of 1 and 2] nearer to each other and therefore wins, in terms of electrical forces? In other words, it is repelling instead of attracting.
royalsnowman 2 years ago
Those repulsive forces do come into play when the molecules get too close...but initially the attractive forces are significant enough to draw them together!
Chemguy
bannanaiscool 2 years ago
Sorry, I am still not convinced. Based on the equation of electrical force, F= KQq/r^2. The nearer both charges, the more potent the forces. So, it is impossible for the attractive force to outwin the repulsive force, regardless of any distance.
royalsnowman 2 years ago
Well, it does depend where those negative are at any one time, doesn't it? Since the electrons aren't as "fixed" as the protons are, perhaps their "movement" in orbitals causes proton-electron attractions to be more significant than e-e or p-p repulsions at any given instant.
Anyway, it's all electrostatic interaction for sure, cuz it ain't gravitational attraction (that Gmm/r2 wouldn't be in the attractive ballpark!)
Chemguy
bannanaiscool 2 years ago
So, you are saying that For example: electrons of molecule 1 moves to the left side of the molecule, causing a temporary dipole - causing the right side to be delta+. Then at the same time, electron of molecule 2 is at the left side, causing the left to be delta -. Then they attract! Is that what you mean? By the way, HoHoHo~ Merry christmas.
royalsnowman 2 years ago
So, you are saying that For example: electrons of molecule 1 moves to the left side of the molecule, causing a temporary dipole -- ie right side become delta +. Then at the same time, electron of molecule 2 is at the left side, causing the left to be delta -. Then they attract! Is that what you mean? By the way, Merry christmas =D
royalsnowman 2 years ago
That's exactly what I'm saying!
Merry Christmas to you, too!
Chemguy
bannanaiscool 2 years ago
bananaiscool YOU SAVED MY LIFE HAHA I HAVE A TEST ON THIS STUFF AND U EXPLAIN SO GOOD THANKS SO MUCH MAN !!!
TheArabMillionaire 2 years ago
oh wow i got an exam tommorow about this EXACT same thing youre explaining. Those videos are pretty useful
oasisoasis21 2 years ago
You rock chemguy!!! you know how to teach,...unlike my grouchy lecturer.....^^
Keep up the good work!! =) And ignore the other nuts who leave crap comments..... =P
betawarrior60x 2 years ago
Thanks! But you know, honestly, 99% of all the comments I receive are positive and constructive!
Chemguy
bannanaiscool 2 years ago
♥ chemguy
J4IMEE 2 years ago
I've learnt more in 10 mins than i have in 2 years.
Why do we have such loser teachers sometimes?
Thinking about it. It has cost me my grades!
MrWookiemonster 2 years ago 2
so true.... not sure how its called but in first exam there were 90% fails in class and in B exam there were 80%....
omriey 2 years ago
hahah it fell of then he changed plans !!
Great teaching style btw.
Even I as a 10th grader can understand and relate to what you are talking about. And I'm just now taking High school chem!!
Zayin1993 2 years ago 5
Thank you for another great video, Chemguy. Med school here I come!
tnagan 2 years ago
Thank you!
rexexdesign 2 years ago
i actually laughed when the hydrogen fell off the ethane becoming an ethyl group. i just read that in my text and understood it when it happened. hahahaha nerding out is fun.
pnayjustforgot 2 years ago 3
chem guy is awesome
denrave26 2 years ago
YOU ARE GREAT!!!
dandreita888 2 years ago
Iv'e learned more from this guy in 15 minutes than I have in 4 hours of chemistry classes at school. He makes it so much fun, but also very interesting and educational all at the same time. We need more teachers like him. XD
KyoukouSuneku 2 years ago 23
SO TRUE~~
i have a huge test tomorrow...
all nighter say what
KareenCasey 2 years ago
WHAT?
flyingporcupine2 2 years ago
lol i still did pretty SHITTAY.
but at least i did better than usual
thanks to this guy ^^
KareenCasey 2 years ago 4
Can you please come teach at my university?
sgolden2 2 years ago 12
This stuff is a bit too basic for university chem, made for high-school me thinks.
karlkarlkarl1234 2 years ago
depends on your local education system and your teacher I guess. But yeah our chemistry 2 and AP chem in high-school here in MS even teaches you up to this point in organic, though AP concentrated more on general chemistry.
canibalgofer 2 years ago
lol
Lokedede 2 years ago
OMG! You have helped me sooo much. You explain things greatly.
Thanks!!
MrCarrie100 2 years ago 2
I AM GOING TO PASSSS!
trongie 2 years ago 4
from the very beginning of your organic chemistry video, you made it very simple and easy to understand!!! i love it!very helpful...keep doing it!
y0itsjayp 2 years ago
5 stars 4 u chemguy
j3ll3ly 2 years ago 4
You help me understand chemistry a lot better.
frais7878 2 years ago
hahaha I have an amazing Chem teacher, but you're even better yet! You make Organic Chem. EASY! Thank- you!!!
balletdancer27 2 years ago
I remember kids in our class made a THC molecule with the "stickies and ballies."
imanerd36 2 years ago 5
ohhhh how sad i didnt have the chance to play with them although i was in private skool!!!!!!!!!!!! i hate itttttttttttt
ayooty93 2 years ago
we never had stickies and bawllies in high school.... :(
kathleen787 2 years ago
stickies and bawlss lol..ur great..funny and i learn from u....wish u were my teacher
ojones212 2 years ago 2
i do believe he said "fun stuff" and "organic chemistry" in the same sentence.
i may be mistaken.... but i think thats what he said.... oh yes. there he goes again. i'm sure he said it.
Rum088 2 years ago 3
Thank yOu for your explanation. YOu make it much simpler ... 5star .. i will supcribe for your channel
HXL056100 2 years ago
i <3 U!
stjustin 2 years ago
"I wanna play with some stickies and ballies, man!"
superdummy74 2 years ago 2
I just took your renert diploma course this weekend and I can honestly say you are the best teacher I have ever had. You kept the class interesting and I learned more in those 3 days than I learned over the past year. Awesome work!
TamaDrummer98 2 years ago
I LOVE U
stuntburnyaya 2 years ago
This comment has received too many negative votes show
ma chem techer is lot way beta than him
khalid95151 2 years ago
Comment removed
bdfhawk 2 years ago
and apparently your english teacher is a lot way worse
gooedintheface379 2 years ago 8
prove it . post a vid and we will be teh judge . but i dough u gonna do it .
HXL056100 2 years ago
lmao when that thing fell it i was kinda sleepy and it scared the shit out of me XD
nub111nub 2 years ago
This is great. As a mature student (46) taking my foundation exam tomorrow, I am confident that I will at least get the chemistry marks (who cares about the physics). My Chem lecturer is great but this makes it all so much clearer. Thanks Chemguy!
MarkBrennan 2 years ago 3
Agreed!
hun33y 2 years ago
You're the most awesome teacher ever.
megantooley90 2 years ago 19
hes so awesome, whaat would i have done wihtout him
anthpage2 2 years ago 6
Lets get a Ton of Stickys and Ballies to play with.
allymetoo 2 years ago
i wanna play with some stickys and ballies!
f1u2c3k4 2 years ago 4
Great Demonstration. :)
chemicalequilibriumH 2 years ago 2
if only i ssaw all these videos before i epically failed my assignment...
BNC005 2 years ago
define epically!
calexculux 2 years ago
d- :)
BNC005 2 years ago
wha bro???
calexculux 2 years ago
hahahahahahahahaha....this one is the best, and most funny omg great job hats off to u for teaching all of us!....
ImmanualKant1989 2 years ago
Mixing fun with education !! Great job teacher
JadenYugiGX 2 years ago
this is good, theres some other good videos on tutormetvdotcom. It helped me with my diterms
ljuarez714 2 years ago
Chemistry now seems interesting to me .... thanx chem guy
princepothan 2 years ago
i love the way u r teaching men u keeping me focused just the way you explain is great keep making videos and thanks a million times.
jaabirana 2 years ago 3
Man, you're so cool.
I wished he lessons where in german, so I would understand more ^^
AlexhibitionTV 3 years ago
Propane has 3 tetrahedral shapes around each of the carbon atoms.
Chemguy
bannanaiscool 3 years ago
Before a piece dropped off your propane model, what were you about to call the shape?
cutebuttt 3 years ago
God Bless u! I understand! I wish u were my professor!
ilovechicago21 3 years ago 2
i wanna play with some stickies and ballies man!!
hahahaha
acmilanshevachels 3 years ago 3
Damn, this is addictive! Kudos ChemGuy!
fstyle28 3 years ago 2
beautiful...i favorated this..His explanation is fantastic...It is very useful..
anthonychemistry 3 years ago
opps drop your propane
blazingdarkness16 3 years ago
thanks chemguy ur helping me a lot!!
nimtimrocks101 3 years ago
I really like the way you speak. It immerses me in the lecture. Unfortunately, I got lost when you started with technical terms that I never heard of. I never took chem in college :(
ricknitro 3 years ago
Van der Waal's forces are LDF and dipole-dipole interactions; LDF is the only way nonpolars bond, and d-d is the way that polars bond (though they have LDF interactions, too!)
Check out my bonding lessons,
Chemguy
bannanaiscool 3 years ago
just to clarify, are LDF another way of saying Van der Waal's forces? thanks in advance
deadflappin 3 years ago
your a reallllly realllly good teacher....It's like better and faster then lecture....I never get bored when understanding your videos.... 5 stars for sure..
nexttigerwoods88 3 years ago
You're awesome, this is really helping me a lot! Thank you so much!
kmusic 3 years ago
one more,I was told organic compounds have low melting an boiling points,why is it that when u said they react their points will be higher?
calexculux 3 years ago
The larger the molecule, the stronger the intermolecular force, and the higher it's boiling point will be!
Chemguy
bannanaiscool 3 years ago
I don't understand how Ch4 will bond with CH4?since they are thesame
calexculux 3 years ago
Intermolecular bonding!
bannanaiscool 3 years ago
very helpful ......
ddrose272 3 years ago 3
am going to really watch it all.
calexculux 3 years ago