Water & Solutions - for Dirty Laundry: Crash Course Chemistry #7

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  • čas přidán 9. 07. 2024
  • Dihydrogen monoxide (better known as water) is the key to nearly everything. It falls from the sky, makes up 60% of our bodies, and just about every chemical process related to life takes place with it or in it. Without it, none of the chemical reactions that keep us alive would happen - none of the reactions that sustain any life form on earth would happen - and the majority of inorganic chemical reactions that shape the surface of the earth would not happen either. Every one of us uses water for all kinds of chemistry every day - our body chemistry, our food chemistry, and our laundry chemistry all take place in water.
    In today's Crash Course Chemistry, we use Hank's actual dirty laundry (ew) to learn about some of the properties of water that make it so special - its polarity and dielectric property; how electrolytes can be used to classify solutions; and we discover how to calculate a solution's molarity as well as how to dilute a solution using the dilution equation.
    Pssst... we made flashcards to help you review the content in this episode! Find them on the free Crash Course App!
    Download it here for Apple Devices: apple.co/3d4eyZo
    Download it here for Android Devices: bit.ly/2SrDulJ
    Table of Contents
    Polarity 02:40
    Dielectric Property 04:13
    Electrolytes 04:29
    Molarity 08:46
    Dilution 10:56
    Crash Course is on Patreon! You can support us directly by signing up at / crashcourse
    Want to find Crash Course elsewhere on the internet?
    Facebook - / youtubecrashcourse
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    CC Kids: / crashcoursekids

Komentáře • 1,8K

  • @crashcourse
    @crashcourse  Před 4 lety +94

    Pssst... we made flashcards to help you review the content in this episode! Find them on the free Crash Course App!
    Download it here for Apple Devices: apple.co/3d4eyZo
    Download it here for Android Devices: bit.ly/2SrDulJ

  • @handyheart
    @handyheart Před 11 lety +294

    Our chemistry teacher taught us a great way to remember the difference between Solutes, Solvents and Solutions.
    'Solute is what you put;
    Solvent is where it went;
    and Solution is what you're producing'
    Hope that helped anybody! :)

  • @Ansa42
    @Ansa42 Před 9 lety +519

    "I named my first cat ion."
    Took me a full 30 secs to finally facepalm.

    • @user-zz1vc7ec2k
      @user-zz1vc7ec2k Před 4 lety +10

      8Ansa hello from 2020

    • @Liamhvet
      @Liamhvet Před 4 lety +1

      Hydron

    • @leo-hao
      @leo-hao Před 4 lety +10

      █▀▀   ▄▀█   ▀█▀       █   █▀█   █▄░█
      █▄▄   █▀█   ░█░       █   █▄█   █░▀█

  • @nightmaresleuth237
    @nightmaresleuth237 Před 5 lety +80

    I work in a hospital, we use hydrogen peroxide to clean particularly stubborn instruments where the blood just won't get out. It's fun to watch it bubble like mad (oxidizing reaction from interacting with catalase). Also good at removing stains on plastic parts from surgical prep solutions

  • @sabinegray1450
    @sabinegray1450 Před 7 lety +355

    So what I'm hearing is, I don't need to buy energy drinks, I just need to dissolve some salt in water?

    • @palacsintakat
      @palacsintakat Před 7 lety +109

      that basically all energy drinks are. water, dye, flavor, and salt.

    • @hedgehog3180
      @hedgehog3180 Před 7 lety +58

      Energy drinks usually have caffine in them. They're basically coffee soda.

    • @palacsintakat
      @palacsintakat Před 7 lety +78

      hedgehog3180 Caffeine doesn't provide energy though. It blocks receptors that make you tired. The energy part is just a placebo

    • @madeleinet8937
      @madeleinet8937 Před 7 lety +41

      Pickle juice (AKA vinegar) is a great hydrator. Better than gatorade because you're not taking in massive doses of sugar at the same time.

    • @jessicaolson490
      @jessicaolson490 Před 6 lety +22

      Energy drinks are caffeinated, if you meant Gatorade then ya, add sugar salt and potassium salt. Best to just drink water though.

  • @xeonsignal2429
    @xeonsignal2429 Před 8 lety +548

    LOL 'I named my first cat ion.'
    Im done XD

    • @user-tv3mc5tr9b
      @user-tv3mc5tr9b Před 6 lety +38

      i have a cats named nuetron, proton, electron, and ion. if i ever get twin cats there names will be solute and solvent

    • @rohankalra4712
      @rohankalra4712 Před 6 lety +5

      cation
      lol

    • @sstares1740
      @sstares1740 Před 5 lety +6

      even funnier when you know that ion in romanian is an actual name

    • @favourak5144
      @favourak5144 Před 5 lety +10

      Are you paw-sitive about that

    • @shubrotodas1154
      @shubrotodas1154 Před 5 lety

      @@favourak5144 i gus' so.

  • @calebfisher3348
    @calebfisher3348 Před 10 lety +122

    At 9:50, molality=moles of solute/Kg of solution. Instead, it should be: molality=moles of solute/Kg of solvent. The mass of the solution and the mass of the solvent are two very different values.

  • @evanknowles4780
    @evanknowles4780 Před 9 lety +474

    "it's good a killing things and that's why we use it in swimming pools"

    • @edver6786
      @edver6786 Před 6 lety +8

      Evan Knowles lmao, why didnt i see this 3 years ago

    • @Zer0_Flowers
      @Zer0_Flowers Před 4 lety +6

      Evan Knowles well, I should stop going to the pool then shouldn’t I

    • @user-zz1vc7ec2k
      @user-zz1vc7ec2k Před 4 lety +4

      Population control and hello from 2020

    • @aksharaa5376
      @aksharaa5376 Před 4 lety

      yet another way to die in a pool. whoopee.

    • @rxmuslxpin8136
      @rxmuslxpin8136 Před 4 lety +2

      u.u Time to go to the pool then

  • @fahffythraine9995
    @fahffythraine9995 Před 10 lety +126

    I would really like to thank you for Crash Course Chemistry, it is really helping me through high school, I really enjoy science, but chemistry is really hard for me to understand, because its makeup is so small and how it works in such a big way... it just really hurts my head sometimes, and thanks to you, I can actually understand it. All of the Crash Course playlists are amazing, thank you Hank, and John Green both for making these Crash Course videos!

    • @zoaffius
      @zoaffius Před 4 lety +10

      hey bro, did you ever pass high school

  • @Identified_Idiot
    @Identified_Idiot Před 7 lety +416

    It's not 0.24 liters of H202, it's 0,43 liters . Spent like an hour trying to figure out how to get 0,24 liters .

    • @sometimelordything
      @sometimelordything Před 7 lety +111

      Oh thank god other people noticed this, I thought I had suddenly forgotten the rules of algebra or something

    • @lamebrainsimran4217
      @lamebrainsimran4217 Před 7 lety +9

      cannibis sativa
      I think you are right

    • @peudroid
      @peudroid Před 6 lety +19

      Yes, 430ml, IF you accept that you need only 0,01 molar solution to clean and not dissolve shirts. Because Hank don't show where he got the molar solution 2.

    • @Leroyawesome
      @Leroyawesome Před 6 lety +3

      THANK YOU

    • @adamperalta187
      @adamperalta187 Před 6 lety +3

      thanks

  • @duketravers9706
    @duketravers9706 Před 8 lety +187

    Tea is my aqueous solution to everything

  • @engerlandt
    @engerlandt Před 8 lety +38

    As a pharmacist, %w/v is actually really useful. Allows us to work out how much drug there is in a volume of liquid which helps with dosing up little kids :p

    • @ZBostOneR
      @ZBostOneR Před 5 lety

      And you allways asume that is a percentage of ml in grams? I can't really get this

  • @thehoodedteddy1335
    @thehoodedteddy1335 Před 10 lety +29

    We need more people like hewell these days. There are so many things that could use cooler names

  • @ThePandaclash
    @ThePandaclash Před 9 lety +15

    I love that there are are no spammers on crash course videos!

  • @emilypond2735
    @emilypond2735 Před 11 lety +10

    Without crashcourse I would have lost my mind by now. I'm a history and language nerd, so chemistry is my archenemy. Because of this video I now longer am panicking about my next test, and so I thank everyone who works on these videos for helping me and my lab group not only get through high school but move on to hopefully be a teacher myself (though of course not a teacher of chemistry).

  • @novalie1151
    @novalie1151 Před 5 lety +40

    "You'll remember, I hope." Come on Hank, have more faith. What were we talking about again?

  • @tedderchemistry
    @tedderchemistry Před 10 lety +22

    Ditto to caleb fisher's comment. Molality is moles of solute divided by kilograms of SOLVENT. Actually, for most solutions where we care about colligative properties (one of the main reasons for using molality) the results of the math come out almost the same but we chemistry teachers are soooooo picky aren't weeeee!
    I do, never-the-less, love your chemistry videos. I use them in my classes quite a lot. Keep up the good work!

  • @hanneliseirrah4755
    @hanneliseirrah4755 Před 9 lety +142

    Molarity and molality? Oh my God, No...........

    • @Ptaku93
      @Ptaku93 Před 8 lety +2

      +Hanneli Seirrah lal

    • @AlbinosaurusR3X
      @AlbinosaurusR3X Před 8 lety +1

      +Hanneli Seirrah ikr

    • @gnuPirate
      @gnuPirate Před 8 lety +14

      +Hanneli Seirrah
      yeah.... It's equally as fun to remember as the difference between "Mitosis" and "Myosis".
      Apparently the people who decide this stuff can't make the frigging words for the differences more distinct than the difference between a vowel-sound and a consonant sound >:(
      What would be wrong with "SexSplit" and "BodySplit" or something clear like that?

    • @nh-a6713
      @nh-a6713 Před 8 lety +6

      +SixSixSix scientists like to sound clever

    • @queensaharaice7376
      @queensaharaice7376 Před 7 lety +5

      lol ikr? well that's science 4 u... were just gonna have 2 learn 2 live with it...
      (damn scientists...)

  • @Zyamaman
    @Zyamaman Před 4 lety +12

    10:23 yeah, dude, measuring solutions in percentage might not make sense to chemists, but it's the way to go in medicine. We dispense drugs in doses, meaning we just need to know the mass of the drug we're giving - the solution it's in is often secondary. If we'd have to figure out dosage from a liquid's molarity' rather than percentage, a lot more people would die in hospitals...

  • @Kraized
    @Kraized Před 9 lety +84

    Whoa, why is Wall-E with mr. Faraday 5:50

    • @headybrew
      @headybrew Před 8 lety +7

      +Kraized I was wondering that myself.

  • @WLBFTWproductions
    @WLBFTWproductions Před 11 lety +6

    I absolutely love how they do a background on some of the great discoveries of chemistry. I pretty much do this this stuff for a living and I have never learned who the Arrhenius is in the Arrhenius equation or Avogadro in Avogadro's constant until this show. Amazing.

  • @creedich
    @creedich Před 10 lety +19

    I love this stuff goes over a week of lecture in 12 minutes

  • @ReplacedTea
    @ReplacedTea Před 10 lety +6

    Dude, I tip my hat to you. You have a video for everything I have needed so far in chemistry. Thanks for the help buddy :)

  • @l8thompson
    @l8thompson Před 9 lety +11

    I've been using these videos for my chem notes. It's makes way more sense than my textbook and my teacher, I just have to pause a lot; thanks #crashcoursechemistry!

  • @youssefkashef7652
    @youssefkashef7652 Před 7 lety +4

    Hank, thank you .
    This course gave me a better understanding of chemistry in fact, made me understand it

  • @isidromaldonado5710
    @isidromaldonado5710 Před 8 lety +5

    bruh, thanks for making these. I have an awesome Chemistry professor but she skips a lot of material. These crash course videos really help me fill in the missing links.

  • @CannedRam
    @CannedRam Před 9 lety +2

    Excellent work! Best and most concise series imaginable.

  • @ZeNashB
    @ZeNashB Před 8 lety +1

    So much thought in just the naming process. I have been underestimating science for its brilliance.

  • @NullHyp
    @NullHyp Před 8 lety +102

    12:20 is WRONG!!!
    V1=(M2xV2)/M1
    =(0.01x38)/0.88
    =0.43L
    Not 0.24L What's more is that 0.24L=240mL not 250ml

    • @bng_ultra646
      @bng_ultra646 Před 4 lety +8

      😳

    • @natalyabarton2205
      @natalyabarton2205 Před 4 lety +6

      Thank god. I was following along and thought I'd really screwed up my maths

    • @user-zz1vc7ec2k
      @user-zz1vc7ec2k Před 4 lety

      🥰

    • @tb2748
      @tb2748 Před 4 lety +5

      Jesus, there are so many errors in these videos they have made. Correction annotations have been removed too.

    • @sudeepjoseph69
      @sudeepjoseph69 Před 4 lety +3

      @@tb2748 You are a believer in Jesus? When did you repent of your sins? I am a newly convert as well.

  • @ceoofdrugs4968
    @ceoofdrugs4968 Před rokem +4

    12:13
    Sorry but the math didn't add up to me , when I tried to calculate it I got 0.431
    (Am I wrong or something?)
    Can someone give me an answer

  • @hello12313211
    @hello12313211 Před 11 lety

    I absolutely love all of your crash course videos! I adore learning about science, but find it incredibly difficult to follow in class. These videos are perfect!
    Thank you!!!

  • @sarahjohnston6072
    @sarahjohnston6072 Před 9 lety +8

    Oh my god I'm s happy we watched this in my science class and I was like yeasssss it's hank! And everyone was like, why is he talking so fast ? It was so awesome :D

  • @HamzahMC
    @HamzahMC Před 5 lety +3

    But is water wet?

  • @Marinealver
    @Marinealver Před 9 lety +90

    Damn there have been a lot of scientists shunned and ridiculed by their peers and seniors. Does this stuff still happen today?

    • @MontySlython
      @MontySlython Před 9 lety +32

      ***** Of course it does, just a lot less now, well mostly (there was that one scientist that helped land a probe on an asteroid and he was ridiculed and attacked by feminists because he wore a shirt with hot chicks on it)

    • @Molly-td5fx
      @Molly-td5fx Před 9 lety +32

      Nate G he was criticized for that shirt because it was highly inappropriate and in pretty much any workplace he'd be major trouble with his boss, or even fired. when discussing something highly important in your work environment, you'd probably want to dress very nicely and not wear a shirt with half naked women on it that distracts your audience from the hard work you have done.

    • @MontySlython
      @MontySlython Před 9 lety +34

      Molly Name Wow and to go so far as to completely destroy one of the greatest achievements in this guy's life so far just because he has a casual shirt on? Besides being fired for wearing an "inappropriate" shirt on the wrong day when he had just landed a fucking probe on an asteroid would be really stupid to begin with. Also that wasn't just criticism that was a public shaming that completely over clocked this amazing achievement and made it seem like it doesn't matter because *gasp* he's wearing a shirt he likes but somehow offends someone else.

    • @Molly-td5fx
      @Molly-td5fx Před 9 lety +7

      Nate G literally tell me what job you wouldn't be fired or at least reprimanded for wearing a shirt as inappropriate as that to present such great discoveries to a worldwide audience

    • @MontySlython
      @MontySlython Před 9 lety +40

      Molly Name Actually I remember reading that his colleagues didn't give two shits what he was wearing they saw him in that shirt and did not reprimand him or get mad at him, please if they cared about what he was wearing they would have put another scientist to do the press conference or whatever and no he did not get reprimanded the only negative backlash (from what I could remember) was from a bunch of butthurt women and misguided feminists.

  • @TheCeg3303
    @TheCeg3303 Před 11 lety +1

    These videos literally go perfectly in time with my chemistry class. its awesome.

  • @sutematsu
    @sutematsu Před 11 lety +2

    The fact that you have taught me both interesting chemistry and how get my laundry cleaner without bleach..... There are no words. Thank you so much, Hank. Your object lesson applies directly to my life! :D

  • @mikeischangingplaces
    @mikeischangingplaces Před 4 lety +5

    Also, % weight by volume is absolutely one of the most common ways of describing solutions in chemistry. If someone says "x% solution", they mean percent weight by volume. And lots and lots and lots of solutions are described that way

  • @jackiewang8411
    @jackiewang8411 Před 10 lety +139

    He's like the Bill Nye of youtube. And for teenagers.

  • @terashewchenko3021
    @terashewchenko3021 Před 7 lety +2

    LOL WallE Easter egg. Too cute

  • @maddjshorts
    @maddjshorts Před 11 lety +2

    This has been very helpful since I'm taking chem now. So a very huge THANK YOU goes out to you. :D

  • @ethannoname3213
    @ethannoname3213 Před 10 lety +3

    Hank you have just saved my chemistry grade and my sanity in more ways than you can ever know

  • @mustang6172
    @mustang6172 Před 9 lety +58

    V1=(0.01 mol/L * 38 L) / 0.88 mol/L
    V1=0.38 mol/L / 0.88 mol/L
    V1=0.43181

    • @angelaflierman
      @angelaflierman Před 9 lety +25

      I got the same. Is Hank's math off? That's the second time that happened in this series. WTF Hank, you might want to ask Santa for a new calculator.

    • @BlingSco
      @BlingSco Před 8 lety +1

      Yh, lol I got the same.

    • @headybrew
      @headybrew Před 8 lety

      +Tirra Hargrow How do you round 430ml to 250ml? I think it's a plain ol' mistake.

    • @EnglishRain
      @EnglishRain Před 7 lety

      Can you tell me where did he get the molarity of the diluted solution / M2? How did he calculate it to be 0.01?

    • @stepheninator2
      @stepheninator2 Před 7 lety +1

      he didn't calculate that, it was the desired molarity for a proper laundry solution

  • @majawillumsen519
    @majawillumsen519 Před rokem +2

    I need a crash course to understand this crash course xD

  • @brandonstout337
    @brandonstout337 Před 8 lety +2

    This guy is HILARIOUS, still very smart and a great teacher! I'd buy this course

    • @TheIsioisi
      @TheIsioisi Před 8 lety +1

      +Brandon Stout Good thing it's for free huh

  • @KWFit
    @KWFit Před rokem +3

    how'd he get the the final answer? im stuck when i get V1 = 0.43 L

  • @DBates132
    @DBates132 Před 10 lety +39

    Anyone else notice Faraday with Wall-E?

    • @sacchrine_
      @sacchrine_ Před 9 lety

      yea, can someone explain that to meeeeeeee?@_@

    • @joshn2564
      @joshn2564 Před 9 lety +4

      I understand from the picture that Both Wall-E & Faraday are Geniuses who work with each other.

  • @telvan2125
    @telvan2125 Před 11 lety +1

    I have a test tomorrow on this topic and this video helped me more then a book could have. It's fast-paced, yet simple and clear. So thanks! I'm a big scishow fan BTW.

  • @AlexIsAwesomez
    @AlexIsAwesomez Před 11 lety +4

    You might MIGHT have just helped me pass my GCSE Chemistry. Thank you.

  • @ahnafnouveau
    @ahnafnouveau Před 9 lety +71

    Molality is NOT moles of solute per kg of solution. It is moles of solute per kg of SOLVENT. Probably a silly mistake by mr. hank

    • @pragyasahay2K
      @pragyasahay2K Před 8 lety +3

      +Ahnaf Islam Actually, he is right because we are talking about the stuff in a whole SOLUTION and NOT in just the solvent

    • @Ismackaru
      @Ismackaru Před 8 lety +9

      +Pragya Sahay yeah but molality is moles of solute over kg of solvent. Period. U can't change that

    • @djr5995
      @djr5995 Před 8 lety +3

      +Pragya Sahay Molality is a property of a solution and is defined as the number of moles of solute per kilogram of solvent.
      Just do a simple search before you try and correct someone.
      Google -> Molality
      -> sorted. Easy :)

    • @integral1191
      @integral1191 Před 4 lety +1

      actually mr. hank was right

    • @samuelralte7
      @samuelralte7 Před 4 lety +1

      Molality can also be understood as ratio of solute to solvent, while molarity is the amount of solute in solution

  • @TheRok
    @TheRok Před 8 lety +1

    For myself and any others interested, to revise over and over again until it is mind-numbingly understood and memorized:
    9:20, 10:33, 11:36

  • @sailingviolinest
    @sailingviolinest Před 10 lety

    you rock and i have never understood chemistry better

  • @howtoguro
    @howtoguro Před 8 lety +17

    Electrolytes, it's what plant's crave!

  • @AlbinosaurusR3X
    @AlbinosaurusR3X Před 8 lety +141

    I think Hank might be the next Bill Nye. =)

    • @skelosgaming3312
      @skelosgaming3312 Před 8 lety +6

      Bill Nye the science guy!

    • @RandomPersonTime
      @RandomPersonTime Před 8 lety +6

      +skelos gaming BILL! BILL! BILL! BILL!

    • @johnreyes2461
      @johnreyes2461 Před 8 lety

      Never ///:

    • @TheSpecialJ11
      @TheSpecialJ11 Před 8 lety +4

      +AlbinosaurusR3X Sadly Crash Course doesn't allow for that same kind of silly charisma; it's better for more quick and dry humor to keep information flowing and get the concepts as deep as possible in a 10-15 minute video. Quick and dry humor doesn't usually work well with kids, but with late tweens, teens, and many adults.

    • @TheSpecialJ11
      @TheSpecialJ11 Před 8 lety

      +AlbinosaurusR3X Sadly Crash Course doesn't allow for that same kind of silly charisma; it's better for more quick and dry humor to keep information flowing and get the concepts as deep as possible in a 10-15 minute video. Quick and dry humor doesn't usually work well with kids, but with late tweens, teens, and many adults.

  • @AdamKornberg
    @AdamKornberg Před 10 lety

    Crash course is the bomb! Keep it up

  • @quirkyfetner
    @quirkyfetner Před 10 lety +1

    I say this on every Hank video:
    I love Hank Green so much!

  • @heinsaar
    @heinsaar Před 8 lety +3

    It's not 'molarity', it's 'morality'.

  • @rigrentals5297
    @rigrentals5297 Před 8 lety +4

    Thanks for the equations SciShow,
    Its helping me a lot in my physiology course in college... Keep up the great work.

  • @BackwardAssassin
    @BackwardAssassin Před 11 lety

    Thanks for pointing that out! I was a bit confused when they connected the same term to 2 different units.

  • @MsMsysqrd
    @MsMsysqrd Před 9 lety

    Thank you for the lecture! :)

  • @petera5146
    @petera5146 Před 9 lety +5

    Pure water does conduct electricity due to the ionization/de-ionization cycle Hank :-)
    i.e. there are always a certain amount OH (Hydroxide) and OH3 (Hydronium) ions present, approx. (concentration) 1 x 10-7 M each respectively present in pH neutral water - hence pH7. Pure H2O (theoretical) would not conduct elec. I suppose, as it has no free electrons - but good luck finding that! As you say water is such a great solvent. Thanks for the great classes, awesome!
    (Personally I see water more as a fundamental force of nature anyway) ;-)

  • @mrthugamer7603
    @mrthugamer7603 Před 4 lety +4

    Wait, but when H²O² breaks apart into H²O+O-
    Why does the O- take up electrons when it is negatively charged?

  • @bethvcumming
    @bethvcumming Před 11 lety +1

    hey could you guys do a episode on equilibriums, that would be great :)

  • @mrvalz1
    @mrvalz1 Před 11 lety

    That is correct. Nice catch.

  • @ShadowZZZ
    @ShadowZZZ Před 6 lety +3

    LOL, the dilution equation looks very similar to the conservation of momentum equation in physics! :D

  • @reneemiller7102
    @reneemiller7102 Před 8 lety +7

    Favorite Chemistry teacher.

  • @carlycrafts
    @carlycrafts Před 11 lety

    I enjoy writing copious notes from your videos. No seriously, without you I would not get this at all.

  • @plesaux
    @plesaux Před 11 lety +2

    are you going to do an episode on equilibriums? i know it covers a lot, but these videos really are useful. almost like study cards.

  • @zerosixe
    @zerosixe Před 10 lety +26

    No ones doing actual calculations.. the M1 is wronggg.. its .432 L or 432 mL.... Unless my calculator is broken, which i doubt. Im sorry Hank, your clothes will still be dirty after yo tea..

    • @DAVASAURUSREX
      @DAVASAURUSREX Před 10 lety +2

      your calculator is not broken, you just switched the numbers when dividing (38/0.88 instead of 0.88/38) which works out to 43.18 and then multiplied by 0.01 to get your figure of 0.432L. The equation will work out if you divide the moles into the liters.

    • @DAVASAURUSREX
      @DAVASAURUSREX Před 10 lety

      DAVASAURUSREX Also Sig Figs!

  • @kayadahlke4218
    @kayadahlke4218 Před 6 lety +4

    Hey! You! Stop scrolling! Get back to learning!

  • @NotEveryoneEats
    @NotEveryoneEats Před 11 lety +2

    We watched this in my Chemistry class today. :D

  • @sydneyschlenkermann8642

    I too enjoy tea, bless this man for helping me review chemistry

  • @katherinetheawesom
    @katherinetheawesom Před 9 lety +16

    If a molecule's(like salt's) solubility in water leads to dissociation between the molecule's cations and anions, then how is it still the same substance as before? Wouldn't that make it into a different thing all together? I mean, salt still tastes like salt when you dissolve it in water.

    • @0olong
      @0olong Před 9 lety +9

      Syne the Sage
      yup, our salt-tasting cells are sensors for simple anions like sodium ions (but not hydrogen ions, which are what our sour receptors sense).

  • @refink33
    @refink33 Před 8 lety +4

    I've done okay so far but this video is crazy. After watching it high 3 times. I'm still lost at Moles, Molar, Molarity formulas

    • @thomaso378
      @thomaso378 Před 8 lety +1

      Same

    • @undergroundskeptic2916
      @undergroundskeptic2916 Před 8 lety +4

      Use other sources as well. Crash Course gives maximum benefits only to those who have a good foundation on the subject. Otherwise, we'd be drowning in all the information, just as we are right now. :P

  • @gaulearnedimp
    @gaulearnedimp Před 5 lety +1

    Hi there! Huge fan of Crash Course, and interested in learning Chemistry.
    I eat CC Psychology episodes like candy. Digest CC Mythology for fun. CC Philosophy is one of my guilty pleasures. You guys do a GREAT job. Buuut...
    I'm finding it hard to understand CC Chemistry. It moves too quickly, and doesn't include enough labeling in the visual examples to follow what everything is, when showing processes or patterns. A whole episode on ions wouldn't be a bad idea, for an idea of how pacing could be easier to follow.
    Again, huge fan! I would love to see a CC Chemistry 2.0
    Thank you for all you do

  • @AngelicAnnisa
    @AngelicAnnisa Před 10 lety

    Hank you're awsome thx for the clip!

  • @redcartiers
    @redcartiers Před 8 lety +9

    #bestchemistryteacherever

  • @FraserSouris
    @FraserSouris Před 10 lety +13

    It is weird that on how many people were laughed at for being right. (e.g Wegener, and many of the people you mentioned in Chemistry)

    • @sutfolsemaj
      @sutfolsemaj Před 9 lety +11

      Fraser Souris For each of these men who were laughed at when right, hundreds were laughed at and wrong.

    • @vishvakseenichamy
      @vishvakseenichamy Před 9 lety

      James Loftus Wise Words

    • @otacon1024
      @otacon1024 Před 4 lety

      "All truth passes through three stages: First, it is ridiculed. Second, it is violently opposed. Third, it is accepted as self-evident." - Arthur Schopenhauer

  • @amberkupferschmidt2961
    @amberkupferschmidt2961 Před 11 lety +1

    I so wish i had these videos last year instead of sitting in boring Honor's chemistry class.Hank is awesome.A lot more interesting!DFTBA! :)

  • @madelinee2720
    @madelinee2720 Před 10 lety

    Thank you for this video!! Literally saved my a** - assignment due Friday :)

  • @stefanieallworth3622
    @stefanieallworth3622 Před 7 lety +3

    It's a shame I need to reproduce all this stuff in german... makes everything just a little bit more difficult.... but luckily I have found that most therms just literally translate... THANKS SCIENCE!!!

  • @nivethasivakumar3740
    @nivethasivakumar3740 Před 5 lety +4

    Make video on coordination compounds please!! Your videos really made me score more!!! I got a hundred marks more on my last exam which is actually for 720 . I got 500 due to your videos . Even the toppers get only300.

  • @petercook9780
    @petercook9780 Před 8 lety +2

    The chemistry seems good as far as I can tell, but the physics at 5.24 with the light bulb turning on makes me sad. No matter what is happening in the beaker, the circuit isn't completed in two ways so the light can't turn on . 1) Connect to both ends of the battery. 2) Connect to both the base and metal side of the light bulb.

  • @noorfatima7823
    @noorfatima7823 Před 7 lety

    I love John Green. The way he talks and explains is phenomenal.

  • @andreavargas3961
    @andreavargas3961 Před 8 lety +3

    HEY, here is a mistake !! Molality is m= moles of a solute/ kg of a solvent , you may put a corection , you made me doubt for my exam , really like CrashCourse :D

  • @danielmazzone7130
    @danielmazzone7130 Před 10 lety +9

    The end of the video confused me a little. When you do the math to calculate initial volume it is: (M2*V2)/M1 = V1 which if you plug the numbers in is: (0.01*38)/0.88 = 0.43 mol/L. Somebody tell me where I went wrong.

    • @lilkoo93
      @lilkoo93 Před 10 lety +1

      I got the same answer, I don't understand!

    • @jonasbertels861
      @jonasbertels861 Před 10 lety +2

      I don't think you're wrong, many people got the same answer: 431ml

    • @aniketh_99
      @aniketh_99 Před 6 lety

      Daniel Mazzone yeah it's actually right it's 0.431 litres I think it's cause Hank didn't have the capacity for it in his measure😂

    • @PrettyyBoyyPatrick
      @PrettyyBoyyPatrick Před 6 lety

      I thinn .43 is right that's what i kept getting on ny Nspire Cx Cas

  • @aithanac4215
    @aithanac4215 Před 11 lety

    THIS IS EXTREMELY CONVENIENT SINCE I HAVE A SOLUTIONS TEST FRIDAY THANKS :)

  • @Vintagee858
    @Vintagee858 Před 4 lety +2

    You should do at the end of every video, make a list of everything that's most important to study.

  • @anderstaylor6694
    @anderstaylor6694 Před 8 lety +15

    12:01 "We need a zero point one molar solution". You forgot the second zero: should be "point zero one". Sry.

    • @EnglishRain
      @EnglishRain Před 7 lety +4

      Can you please explain how did he find out M2? How did he get 0.01?? It is at the same timestamp that you quoted.

  • @saeedbaig4249
    @saeedbaig4249 Před 8 lety +402

    Just out of curiosity, is any1 here just because they genuinely enjoy learning about chemistry in their free time and aren't studying for school?
    Like, their other subjects I can understand. Physics is weirdly wonderful in that it has lots of counter-intuitive things like general relativity and quantum mechanics. Philosophy (or, to b more specific, God) is always an interesting topic of conversation. So is politics (which's also important, if u want some idea of how 2 vote) and economics is a somewhat controversial (yet all the more interesting because of it) subject to be educated about (especially since it sort of links back to politics), which's y I keep up 2 date on those videos of theirs (still waiting for that modern physics tho!)
    However... I have never met any1 hu is just interested in chemistry and wud go out of zer way 2 learn it. At least, not as much as those other subjects I just mentioned.

    • @Funymoney010
      @Funymoney010 Před 8 lety +23

      same here I'm just watching because I find it interesting and like learning and getting smarter

    • @saeedbaig4249
      @saeedbaig4249 Před 8 lety +2

      Alex Christensen 2 each their own I guess. Enjoy!

    • @solarisgemrestoration
      @solarisgemrestoration Před 8 lety +4

      I am!
      😀

    • @uhumanu6600
      @uhumanu6600 Před 8 lety +21

      its an intimidating subject, and unlike politics, philosophy, and economics, it's one that you can't really get deep into without experimenting and gaining first hand experience in a classroom or lab. You can talk with your friends all day about the meaning of life, but you can't really study chemical reactions just for fun, because for one, the equipment isn't readily available, and two, it takes a lot of studying just to be able to conceptualize what is really happening. Its an invisible science mostly, and people don't find what they can't easily understand or even experience to be very engaging . I think if more people really dedicated just a little bit of energy to see what chemistry can show us beyond just equation balancing and a periodic table, they would see how amazing the science really is. But you kinda have to go to school to get that basic and necessary understanding

    • @adhdengineer
      @adhdengineer Před 8 lety +7

      I'm currently restraining myself from buying a set of lab glassware off ebay. loads of of the fun bits for 85 uk £.
      i've no idea what i'd do with it but i want it.

  • @DanielC01000100
    @DanielC01000100 Před 11 lety +1

    Great!!! Flashback to my highschool classes, but excellent video

  • @soumyavemuri
    @soumyavemuri Před 10 lety

    I love the fact that he doesn't over-do things

  • @pedrobravo4404
    @pedrobravo4404 Před 7 lety +32

    #makesockswhiteagain

    • @yikesmcgee1283
      @yikesmcgee1283 Před 5 lety

      Pedro Ignacio Bravo Collado too close to home buddy. Can’t help but wanting to stop the white replacement

  • @MegaCraigh
    @MegaCraigh Před 10 lety +15

    You guys need to stop being so DILUTIONAL. No? I'm joking.

    • @declansmith6432
      @declansmith6432 Před 9 lety

      delusional* 0_o

    • @MegaCraigh
      @MegaCraigh Před 9 lety

      Dilutional? As in dilute? As in to make a less concentrated solution?

  • @chemanywhere4659
    @chemanywhere4659 Před 4 lety +1

    This is a good video for explaining the background of water and solutions. But can post more videos on questions solving? As i think this is is where most students are facing problem at.

  • @ashg2701
    @ashg2701 Před 5 lety

    These videos save me regularly.

  • @maruthgoyal1367
    @maruthgoyal1367 Před 10 lety +15

    How the hell did Hank know the values for M2 ?

  • @KB24Nation24
    @KB24Nation24 Před 8 lety +5

    much appreciated if you could add text transcripts for your videos!

  • @kachingaaa
    @kachingaaa Před 11 lety +1

    the "tea" at the end was so cute xD

  • @aryankinge2295
    @aryankinge2295 Před 7 lety +1

    VEER LOVED IT

  • @joaomatosgraca1013
    @joaomatosgraca1013 Před 8 lety +3

    If only youtube had a setting of 0.9 speed.
    You're amazing Hank, but you talk a bit too fast for non natives (of english speaking)
    Anyway, keep it up and thank you

    • @danielpuerto8829
      @danielpuerto8829 Před 8 lety

      +João Matos Graça same here

    • @vinayakpendse7233
      @vinayakpendse7233 Před 5 lety

      Hey, I am non native too.
      But after watching lot of video I got used to it, you will get too

    • @asterism_s
      @asterism_s Před 4 lety

      you can, you just have to click on the word "custom" where you choose the speed