I'm doing my 1st yr. Chemistry course and from the textbook, Ecell=cathode-anode I find the sum of the half redox rXn is more simple to comprehend! Thank-you!
One question I do have in combuion (oxidation-reduction).
If you follow Gibbs free energy equation, even the combustion of Carbon compound have a point in which the favorability of spontaneity reverses the process and other compounds are formed, probabilty do to Fusion of some kind, or a release of an Alpha particle.
How do we determine this point, because plasma states are the new gig!
At extremely high temperatures, processes that maximize the entropy of a system will dominate. Compounds will break into small molecules, and then to atoms (more pieces) and then to ions (even more particles). The more particles, the higher the entropy. That's why plasma states are formed at high T. (Fusion actually goes the other way.)
Sir wight, About the intrinsic property of E cell. If there would be more magnitude of electrons to pass, the E cell is constant. So, its like saying electron is independent to E cell during redox.? I always commit to memory about intrinsic property of E cell just to pass the exams and of course after the exams i will be forgetting it. Is there any other intuition? please if u have some simple concepts that u can share..i will certainly appreciate..Thank u..
Hi. There are indeed effects of internal resistance, but for most chemistry courses, these are ignored. For most purposes, learning how to calculate the cell potential from the concentrations will do. Of course, if you run a cell for a while, then the concentrations will change, and then E changes. You should know how to do that using the Faraday constant and the balanced redox reaction.
what about a c-c (ethyl)? ie: trichloroethylene the carbon with the two Cl is +2 and the other carbon with one Cl and the H is 0... what is the rule there? thanks.
Hi. It's exactly as you say. The two carbons have different formal oxidation states, +2 and 0. Remember, though, that oxidation states are mostly a formal concept, and the actual extent of electron transfer is usually much smaller than the formal oxidation states imply. Still, it's a useful concept for classifying the reactive properties of many atoms and molecules.
this guy is a better lecturer than my professor and i go to one of the top universities in the us...
BluMonkiSpartan 2 months ago
I'm doing my 1st yr. Chemistry course and from the textbook, Ecell=cathode-anode I find the sum of the half redox rXn is more simple to comprehend! Thank-you!
kkkarenkok 6 months ago
TRADUCTION SPANISH
TheDWiNPe 6 months ago
This has been flagged as spam show
Is the highest and lowest possible O.N can only be found in a periodic chart or is there a way to determine it?
evilprefectprincess 1 year ago
i consider myself a pretty dumb guy, and I guess I'm right couse I didn't understand this video, why am I typing this? I wouldn't know
Zee96969696 1 year ago
Thanks for the video!
euch27 1 year ago
One question I do have in combuion (oxidation-reduction).
If you follow Gibbs free energy equation, even the combustion of Carbon compound have a point in which the favorability of spontaneity reverses the process and other compounds are formed, probabilty do to Fusion of some kind, or a release of an Alpha particle.
How do we determine this point, because plasma states are the new gig!
drstingrae 1 year ago
At extremely high temperatures, processes that maximize the entropy of a system will dominate. Compounds will break into small molecules, and then to atoms (more pieces) and then to ions (even more particles). The more particles, the higher the entropy. That's why plasma states are formed at high T. (Fusion actually goes the other way.)
chemdog8 1 year ago
Thanks for clarifying this, I must go over fusion a little more deeply tonight before I quit!
Your insight and help is appreciated.
I really am trying to understand as mush as I can for the MCAT
drstingrae 1 year ago
Thank, love the chart at the beginning!
Good stuff!
drstingrae 1 year ago
Thanks Chuck, very coherent lecture.
benjiimaster 1 year ago
Haha, YouTube deleted my comment on making a nuclear bomb, we are living in 1984. What the hell?
karlkarlkarl1234 2 years ago
Sure, but it would probably only produce a hypothetical explosion.
chemdog8 2 years ago
very helpfull way better explained then our professor did =)
djswizzair 2 years ago
Very Helpful! Thank you
lakrsman8 2 years ago
thanks. very good lecture
thekillerz12345 2 years ago 5
Sir wight, About the intrinsic property of E cell. If there would be more magnitude of electrons to pass, the E cell is constant. So, its like saying electron is independent to E cell during redox.? I always commit to memory about intrinsic property of E cell just to pass the exams and of course after the exams i will be forgetting it. Is there any other intuition? please if u have some simple concepts that u can share..i will certainly appreciate..Thank u..
anthonychemistry 2 years ago
Hi. There are indeed effects of internal resistance, but for most chemistry courses, these are ignored. For most purposes, learning how to calculate the cell potential from the concentrations will do. Of course, if you run a cell for a while, then the concentrations will change, and then E changes. You should know how to do that using the Faraday constant and the balanced redox reaction.
chemdog8 2 years ago
what about a c-c (ethyl)? ie: trichloroethylene the carbon with the two Cl is +2 and the other carbon with one Cl and the H is 0... what is the rule there? thanks.
guggaman 2 years ago
Hi. It's exactly as you say. The two carbons have different formal oxidation states, +2 and 0. Remember, though, that oxidation states are mostly a formal concept, and the actual extent of electron transfer is usually much smaller than the formal oxidation states imply. Still, it's a useful concept for classifying the reactive properties of many atoms and molecules.
chemdog8 2 years ago
Great lecture.
unstoppable008 2 years ago 4