Solvent Tierlist

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  • čas přidán 24. 06. 2022
  • In this video, I decide which solvents are the best! I consider their properties as solvents for chromatography, reactions, transferring as well as recrystallization. (This video is a reupload).
    Leave a comment down below if you have any chemicals that you think should be included next time! Let me know if you disagree with my assessments!
    Ok, so CO2 and benzene are not polar in terms of having a net dipole, but as a solvent, the polarity of their bonds (C=O polarized for CO2, and for benzene it is quadrupolar) is able to dissolve similar functional groups in polar molecules.
    / thatchemist
    Community Discord - / discord

Komentáře • 214

  • @marc-andreservant201
    @marc-andreservant201 Před rokem +142

    Ethanol is one of the few solvents that's not only safe to drink, it's actually fun to drink. The German Bad Guy Party had to go to great lengths to prevent their rocket scientists from drinking their stock of rocket fuel.

    • @MrDJAK777
      @MrDJAK777 Před rokem +23

      The crazy part about that Russian/German soldiers drinking rocket fuel thing is that them switching to methanol to "fix" the issue didn't immediately slow them down outside medically.

    • @milesmccollough5507
      @milesmccollough5507 Před rokem +10

      love the TOS-compliance of “German Bad Guy Party”. never knew that just plain ethanol was used as rocket fuel!

    • @NormReitzel
      @NormReitzel Před rokem +7

      That also applies to "Torpedo juice" during WWII.

    • @misham6547
      @misham6547 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Well it is a carcinogen, so not so safe

    • @MichaelClark-uw7ex
      @MichaelClark-uw7ex Před 11 měsíci +4

      Yep the V2 rocket used 75%ethanol/25%water and liquid oxygen
      151 rum and LOX, not really but the ratios are the same.

  • @Grak70
    @Grak70 Před rokem +116

    A compilation of these guides with a classification system for the various advantages and disadvantages would have been a great asset to my lab days. So much of this is not taught and just learned the hard way or by lab tribal knowledge.

  • @davidyoungs1482
    @davidyoungs1482 Před rokem +62

    As a pharmaceutical process development chemist, your solvent list is one of the main reasons why so many of us are needed. The toxicities of many of your favorites preclude using them anywhere near the end of a Active Pharmaceutical Ingredient synthesis. Sometimes, the R&D scientist needs to consider the downstream implications - will your product have any potential use in humans or animals??

    • @That_Chemist
      @That_Chemist  Před rokem +22

      it sucks because some of them are such good solvents - HFIP will be realized as likely the best solvent in chemistry unless a better fluorinated alcohol is discovered, but it is super toxic, and almost impossible to get rid of every last trace of it - amazing solvent though.

    • @That_Chemist
      @That_Chemist  Před rokem +29

      Also this isn't related to your comment, but I would absolutely LOVE to make a video with footage of a process development lab - maybe after >6 months or so. As you highlight, most researchers aren't aware of what actual process chemistry looks like, and I would love to help bring that world to chemists everywhere

    • @seanq8536
      @seanq8536 Před rokem

      @@That_Chemist HFIP (1,1,1,3,3,3-Hexafluoropropan-2-ol) isn't that toxic? I can name 5 solvents I use daily that are orders of mangitude more acutely toxic.

    • @AB-80X
      @AB-80X Před 7 měsíci +2

      @@That_Chemist Problem is that most of us in R&D are so focused on that, so even if we have an understanding of what goes on "downstream" in precess chem, it rarely enters our mind. Not meant to sound careless, that's just the reality of things - it is also a matter of workload. As in your example with HFIP. What should we use instead? Not much comes to mind.

  • @stephenjacks8196
    @stephenjacks8196 Před rokem +53

    Ethyl alcohol by far is the chemists friend.
    Organic solvent for my first lab experiments. Potable at my professor's (lab) group meetings at the local tavern. Several of my chemist friends brewed beer, etc. My first training on GC was determining ethyl alcohol % in beer.

  • @davidreznick9902
    @davidreznick9902 Před rokem +38

    I'm surprised the fluorine chemist didn't mention HF! Also, Hg is a decent solvent too depending on the type of chemistry you are doing...

  • @Conex145
    @Conex145 Před rokem +19

    An idea for a future episode: can you explain the 5 most complicated reactions you have done in your career? Like reactions you have done with very sensitive reagents or which had a very advanced work up. Especially these that can only be carried out upon complete oxygen and moisture exclusion? Would be highly interesting

  • @piguyalamode164
    @piguyalamode164 Před rokem +21

    I get to work with dichloromethane. It's pretty cool, we use it to dissolve polymer residue. The big drawback is that it dissolves nitrile gloves. Luckily it is not too horrible.

    • @klauskarpfen9039
      @klauskarpfen9039 Před 6 měsíci

      It's an alkylating reagent, which unfortunately isn't recognized by most chemists. It reacts with amines, even tertiary amines already at room temperature and my guess ist that is is probably rather carcinogenic. But industry doesn't want to see this... .

    • @RT42069
      @RT42069 Před 5 měsíci +1

      I work with it occasionally, either repackaging it or blending it to make wood stripper. It can cause burns, but it also evaporates super fast. Also it smells good, not that you should be smelling it too much

  • @eier5472
    @eier5472 Před rokem +13

    "but we're not considering toxicity here"
    Meanwhile in the EU, toxicity is the very first thing that is considered. So goodbye benzene, DMF, chloroform, DCM, methanol, nitromethane, toluene and any of the fluorinated stuff in consumer products. Heck even in the lab we rarely use chloroform and I'm yet to use benzene as a solvent

    • @eier5472
      @eier5472 Před rokem +1

      Also, acetone may be gone from consumer applications in a few years because it's listed as an explosive precursor. But whoever is stupid enough to make a bomb out of TATP would most likely only hurt themself

    • @moropikkuu
      @moropikkuu Před rokem +2

      Benzene is „the solvent that shall not be named“ here, yeah, but chloroform? That’s very common.. heck, my first orgchem lab EVER had a synthesis which needed like 300ml of chloroform

    • @avagadrhoe768
      @avagadrhoe768 Před rokem +2

      i'm pretty sure i've inhaled over 300mL of chlorinated solvents over my professional chemist and schizo drug fiend careers and im (relatively) fine

    • @eier5472
      @eier5472 Před rokem

      @@moropikkuu We do use chloroform in a lab from time to time, but for many applications we substitute it with DCM

    • @eier5472
      @eier5472 Před rokem

      @@avagadrhoe768 I've had a whole beaker of methanol (it says "toxic on skin contact") spilled over my hand, rinsed it quickly and literally nothing happened.
      We also had lab assistants who didn't knew that (semi-)dilute acids cause chemical burns more quickly than concentrated. You can get conc sulfuric acid on your skin, as long as you wash it off quickly, nothing happens. These chemicals _can_ be dangerous, but I feel like their level of scariness is vastly overestimated. Just, you know, don't be an idiot

  • @porphyrin2290
    @porphyrin2290 Před rokem +14

    For deuterated solvents, I would say benzene-d6 and THF-d8 are legends in the field of organometallic chemistry.

  • @HiwasseeRiver
    @HiwasseeRiver Před rokem +5

    When I selected solvents for commercial production I had to take all those other factors into account (tox, enviro, emissions, fate in ground water etc.). The guys in the plant were always pleased when I rolled out a new project and the solvent that smelled good. With those criteria in mind Tert-butyl alcohol had good acceptance. DMF was hated. Since our reactive byproducts were water quenched it was always important to have a good quenching properties - boiling point, density, and not emulsify. Alkanes were the best by those criteria, alcohols and ethers were not. Trace THF in water makes the mixture flammable so that complicated downstream designs. Heavier that water solvents were more or less banned from consideration due to the nightmare of dealing with those in ground water. Good review- Loved it! BTW - I'm racking my brain - one time we toll processed something in a solvent that had a warning that it could cause testicluar atrophy - it will come to me eventually.

  • @avagadrhoe768
    @avagadrhoe768 Před rokem +7

    my man is back!!! you solvate my heart ❤️

  • @lexinwonderland5741
    @lexinwonderland5741 Před rokem +3

    even if some of the specific opinions make my head spin, your tier list videos are my favorite of your content (which is saying something, bc your content is generally great) and one of my favorite pieces of content online period! thanks for the good work!

  • @innawoodsman
    @innawoodsman Před 2 měsíci +1

    I use THF at work every day. One time I was working near someone who was using it and didn't have my respirator on. The venitlation in the building is excellent and I was several feet away, and it still gave me a headache and made me feel a little sick for the next couple hours. Always wear your PPE when working with or even near hazardous materials.

  • @tosyl_chloride
    @tosyl_chloride Před rokem +1

    16:53 Oh my boy DCM. Once I did a synthesis of a TMS-substituted ester, which entailed wrestling for two weeks with the purification process. In one of the many (flash) columns attempts, I was looking through NMR data of the eluted fractions and scratching my head as to where the hell did the product go - as it turned out the target ester (and a lot of residual palladium) was stuck at the top of the sillica column, not budging one inch in the flow of hexane eluent. After washing it out with DCM and running several more columns with DCM-based solvent mixtures (including perhaps three dozen TLCs to test them out first) I finally got my compound. This one occasion also refreshed my appreciation for solvents that don't boil at r.t. and drip out of the pipette I'm using to pick it up - DCM and Et2O were assholes to handle, but at least they were easy to rotovap.
    Also shout-out to DCM's 1.33 g/ml density. Having the organic phase be heavier than water is such a pleasant property to work with in solvent extractions.

  • @koukouzee2923
    @koukouzee2923 Před rokem +4

    You cant believe how much I'm learning from your videos

  • @brianmcquain3384
    @brianmcquain3384 Před rokem

    This is my favorite chemistry Channel. I thank you because, I frequently laugh at least once while watching them

  • @jgottula
    @jgottula Před rokem +5

    I love all these tier list videos you make!
    They’re entertaining to watch, and I can follow along decently okay, even as someone whose formal chemistry education ended over a decade ago, in high school, with AP Chem. (Btw, we had an amazing class with an amazing teacher; I don’t doubt we learned a fair bit more than other classes at the same level.)
    The ranking criteria used aren’t always the most… rigorous, lol. (With some of my favorites being “S-tier because it’s in soda”, “D-tier because drugs”, and of course the perennial fallback of “uhhh, too lazy, I really just want to talk about the next chemical… first letter of its name, perfect!” 😝)
    What I find most impressive is how broad and diverse a set of chemicals you’re able to cover each time.
    It’s cool both in the sense of
    _wow, I learned about quite a few different interesting chemicals I wasn’t familiar with before!_
    but also
    _wow, this guy really knows his stuff and can just sorta speak extemporaneously about all these various things with ease, at a pace that’s pretty impressive!_
    👨‍🔬👍

    • @That_Chemist
      @That_Chemist  Před rokem +2

      Thank you for your kind comment :)

    • @jgottula
      @jgottula Před rokem +1

      @@That_Chemist Oh yeah so I just remembered something about that awesome chemistry class I was in. I have a brief story to tell.
      At the end of the year, after the AP exams, we each got to do some sort of project of our own involving a synthesis, or demonstration, or whatever, that we chose personally. And we had a bunch of books and binders of stuff (a bit on the older end of things, I think) filled with various procedures and demos and whatnot that we could browse to find something that piqued our personal interests.
      Right, so, the project I ended up doing, was making some explosives! Specifically, in one of the books or binders, there was a good (and probably fairly old) procedure for making peroxyacetone! That seemed pretty awesome to me: I get to use some of that cool 30% hydrogen peroxide that leaves the peculiar white stains on your hands and comes in that funky bottle with the built-in accordion section (to be really accommodating of the peroxide, and give it the freedom to maybe decide that it actually wants to suddenly decompose all at once BEFORE it’s chemistry time, maybe because it’s just more comfortable that way). And I get to use acetone, which is kinda neat because, similar to hydrogen peroxide, it’s a readily accessible “normal” type of thing. And after some steps that I can’t really remember anymore, I end up with this cool white powder that makes fireballs, which I would set off with a lit-match-on-a-yardstick, or even a hammer impact! (Oooh, impact sensitivity! Cool!)
      Some years later, I made a bit of a discovery. Something along the lines of “uh-wait a minute, hang on… why does the Wikipedia article on this cool stuff I remember making in high school chemistry class, mostly talk about… like… terrorists and stuff? Oh god, it literally says verbatim that ‘TATP … has been used as the explosive of choice in several terrorist bomb attacks since 2001’…”
      So uh, yeah, I now feel… different… about my choice of project. I guess it’s affirmatively not a problem that I don’t remember what the prep steps were, because writing them in a CZcams comment would probably violate… some rules. I’m guessing. Lol.
      I suppose my ultimate thoughts, in summary, are that it was a cool project, and there wasn’t anything wrong with it per se (that I know of). I just happened to be unlucky and choose one of, you know… one of the less-good possible choices in terms of “does this thing have good cred, or a notably sketchy reputation?”. (I want to go back and rewatch the explosives video again-super awesome collab btw 😛-because I’m reasonably sure you either skimmed over TATP et al kinda super quick or just plain didn’t include them, because… reputations. 😐)

    • @jgottula
      @jgottula Před rokem

      Oh god, I still have the lab report file

    • @jgottula
      @jgottula Před rokem +1

      @@That_Chemist If the numbers in my lab report are correct, and my chemistry math skills still work, it would appear that (after some smaller initial samples) I eventually produced “six or eight” 200 mL test tubes “and in each used twice the quantities recommended”. I think that means I potentially had somewhere on the order of 31-41 g of TATP and/or DADP in that test tube rack. (Likely much less, as I reckon my yield was not near 100%. So maybe let’s just randomly guess 25-75%; in which case it’d have been “only” about 10-23 grams.)
      Much to my dismay, Derek Lowe has an article on TATP from 2017. In which he talks about how it is “a substance that I definitely won’t work with” (uh oh), then elaborates that the only reason he didn’t make an official Things I Won’t Work With post for it was due to its “unfortunate significance” (oh no), and describes how a student unintentionally made perhaps as much as 40 g of it by accident, apparently necessitating a bomb squad (wtf). Also he adds that 40 g theoretical is “too much by any reasonable person’s definition”, and says making or handling this kind of quantity “is an invitation to be killed without warning”.
      Apparently I supposedly had like 30 or 40 g theoretical. *Intentionally.* 🤯
      In my lab report I described that a “small pile” of “a few grams” of the stuff produced a fireball “perhaps 50 centimeters in diameter”. 😐
      It didn’t seem overly violent, as far as I remember. 🤔 Kinda like, I dunno, the sort of fiery spectacle from burning hydrogen bubbles. Just not as slow. Since it’s, you know, an actual primary.
      Maybe I didn’t successfully make the actual stuff, and that’s the only reason I’m here today. I dunno.
      Also in my lab report, I remark about how I left one batch of the stuff to dry on filter paper in the fume hood over the weekend; and upon returning Monday, the filter paper was still there, but nothing was on it. So either it spontaneously detonated (the intentional detonations didn’t mar the filter paper, so it seemed distinctly possible), or possibly it all sublimated away (it does seem to have a high vapor pressure but I’ve forgotten everything about how to estimate whether it’s plausible for the rate to indeed be high enough for that to happen).
      🫠

  • @charleyroe8995
    @charleyroe8995 Před rokem +1

    THF-d8 and pentane treat me so well, pretty much everything I work with dissolves in either one or the other

  • @NormReitzel
    @NormReitzel Před rokem

    I had a fellow grad student who did a prep and then took An NMR of his product. There were ethanol peaks, which he had expected, but then a bunch f small peaks, ethyl acetate, n-butyl peaks, 2-propanol peaks, and he wondered whence they came. He did not know that "Reagent Grade Ethanol (denatured)" had all that crap in it. His ignorance was more disturbing than were his spectra. I really appreciated your solvents discussion (more than the Tier classification. It was a good introduction to a lot of unfamiliar solvents. I have always thought of CO2 as nor-nor-acetone, ( 1,1-methanedione ) for exam[ple, it softens vulcanized rubber and solvent crazes acrylic plastic. Also, if you use it to pressurize tires, it rapidly diffuses right through the rubber, so the inflation doesn't last long. Really enjoyed the video! 👍

  • @derenjoy3r
    @derenjoy3r Před rokem +8

    6:15 - CO2 is pretty polar ? I thought it was the classic example for a nonpolar molecule as a counterexample to H2O, IIRC it was the 2nd molecule we learned about regarding polarity because it gets the Idea accross very well if you compare it and H2O

    • @That_Chemist
      @That_Chemist  Před rokem +2

      see the desc

    • @derenjoy3r
      @derenjoy3r Před rokem

      @@That_Chemist oh thats neat I was not aware of that

    • @victordonchenko4837
      @victordonchenko4837 Před rokem +3

      CO2 has no dipole moment but it does have a quadrupole moment, i.e. the charge is not spherically distributed, the negative charge is more on the end Os. This is important for interactions with other molecules -- say, for making a solution or when CO2 binds to the enzyme RuBisCO, which is what fixes carbon in plants.

    • @sabby88888888
      @sabby88888888 Před rokem

      CO2 is pretty nonpolar, yes. Used to extract cannabinoids so definitely nonpolar, as butane and propane are the other primary solvents used for thc and cbd (other than ethanol of course, which gives lower yields). You need to use supercritical CO2 extraction.

    • @sabby88888888
      @sabby88888888 Před rokem

      Oh you explained it in the comments, duh

  • @Blakearmin
    @Blakearmin Před rokem +3

    Is it benzene? I bet it's benzene. It's back, baby!

  • @1brytol
    @1brytol Před rokem +2

    Thanks for the reupload bro ♥️

  • @sheepwars2959
    @sheepwars2959 Před rokem +3

    During my training I worked a lot with diethyl ether and pentane, since we were mostly working at -80C. Did a lot of ether/pentane columns too. And let me tell you, the suck ass. Especially in summer. What's an AC anyway? Ever did an ether/pentane column at 30C room temperature? The only good thing was that my supervisor realized very quickly that they didn't work, so I could usually go home early over that summer. Great solvents. S-tier for allowing me to enjoy nice summer days.

  • @madisondines7441
    @madisondines7441 Před rokem +3

    EG can actually be quite useful for affinity separations of very similar compounds when in a solution with water, and with heptane. I have had a lot of success using its cousin, PG with a water cosolvent and an immiscible heptane phase to separate compounds with different amounts of alcohol groups that are otherwise structurally identical. The problem of course was that it needs a mol-dist to remove the solvent afterwards, so its usability depends on having some very specific equipment that most labs just won't have.

  • @pmathewizard
    @pmathewizard Před rokem +5

    When Soda is not on the list

    • @Rae_N7
      @Rae_N7 Před rokem

      At least water was put into S-tier. It is in soda after all :D

  • @189643478
    @189643478 Před rokem +8

    All you need is DMSO, agua, and some ACN as reagent for cycloadditions… Oh, yeah and some hexane for hexane/agua mixtures… So, with 4 solvents you can do any chemistry imaginable 😉😝

  • @pierreproudhon9008
    @pierreproudhon9008 Před 9 měsíci

    Acetonitrile may not have been everyone's favorite solvent. But when it comes to reactions, oh lord the wonders you can do by refluxing things with it!

  • @ajesbayes9057
    @ajesbayes9057 Před rokem +3

    Benzene activated the Australian Chemist neurons

  • @user-ng9mm3zb8p
    @user-ng9mm3zb8p Před rokem +1

    You know, I rarely comment here, but I must admit, that this channel is awsome! Keep up the good work!

  • @lloydevans2900
    @lloydevans2900 Před rokem +1

    Another important property of 2-methylTHF is that it has a much lower freezing point than plain old THF. So if you have a reaction you need to do at a lower temperature than THF can tolerate (and lower than you can go with a dry ice cold bath), but still needs the solvating properties of THF, then that's another situation where 2-methylTHF can be really useful.

  • @KateyMoseley
    @KateyMoseley Před rokem

    DMF was thr solvent I worked with on my BSc back in 2014 for my dissertation. Fun!

  • @noahater5785
    @noahater5785 Před rokem +1

    Water seems like the safest of all the solvents because it’s not toxic, and since it’s basically the ash from burning hydrogen, it’s not flammable either, but It does have am extremely low freezing point of 0*C/32*F so that might be a bit of a problem in some applications

  • @madispalmet9905
    @madispalmet9905 Před 7 měsíci

    Great video, man :D

  • @coingeckolistings1037
    @coingeckolistings1037 Před rokem +3

    Anhydrous ammonia deserves a much higher position, in my judgement. It is, I would argue, the nitrogen analog of water, and is special through analogy to this most critical of solvents; it is a shadow of H2O, and hence, a shadow of the solvent of life. The reason we don't use ammonia more often (whenever we need a highly-polar solvent) is that water does exist. If there was no such thing as water, then ammonia would claim its rightful place. As silly as it is to contemplate a universe where water does not exist, I believe ammonia is being unfairly penalized due to the existence of its more-famous chemical cousin. As much as ammonia's volatility is an annoyance when using it as a solvent, this same volatility is a Godsend when one needs to remove it.

  • @WowUrFcknHxC
    @WowUrFcknHxC Před rokem +1

    I love that this simultaneously feels like shit posting and educational at the same time

  • @stephenjacks8196
    @stephenjacks8196 Před rokem +1

    Carbon Disulfide autoignites at 100C or the spark when pouring between vessels.
    CS2 is a heavy vapor that requires good fume hood suction.

  • @humr2346
    @humr2346 Před rokem +2

    I work with triterpenes and for me are the best friends DCM, EtOAc, THF. And thanks for reminding me of Tol-Py azeotrope. I am currently doing acetylation in pyridine, so i can try it.

    • @klauskarpfen9039
      @klauskarpfen9039 Před 6 měsíci

      pyridine can fairly easily be removed by aqueous acid washes - if your product is lipophilic enough.

  • @palloc1325
    @palloc1325 Před rokem +1

    I love TFE (trifluoroethanol) due to the fact that oxygen gas is pretty soluble in TFE. So if you have to use O2 atmosphere it is pretty damn good.
    Sometimes I have to make DCM-MeOH 0->50% column, but if I am using DCM-ammonia MeOH it is less painfull. So I pretty love ammonia.

  • @the_kingslayer
    @the_kingslayer Před rokem +1

    You could be talking about anything and I would listen to you... A true "golden voice"

  • @maxiliarydendrite8926
    @maxiliarydendrite8926 Před rokem +5

    H2O is a great solvent

  • @yeoldebaccyfarm3081
    @yeoldebaccyfarm3081 Před rokem +2

    To me some really high boiling point solvents have their uses. Sometimes hard to get rid of but they have their uses. Not very common so selection is limited in most labs without specifically ordering.

  • @nulsdodage
    @nulsdodage Před rokem +2

    DMSO is A-S tier for short peptides with 10-20 amino acid sequences, well, at least some of them. Actually it depends on what the sequence is.

  • @christopherleubner6633

    Ammonia is a solvent used to grow high purity gallium nitride crystals. My favorite solvent is chloroform as it dissolves a lot of nonpolars, is very heavy, and boils at a low temperature. As far as the best one, its the one that disolves stuff, and doesnt interfere. 🤓

  • @moetard9581
    @moetard9581 Před rokem +2

    I have not seen a chemist that hasn't been fucked over by water ever. Even ppm of water in the department central N2 killed some reactions. My grudge is real and my yields are poor.
    Water should belong in F

  • @bengunderson712
    @bengunderson712 Před rokem

    For 21 minutes of gibberish, this video was really good!

  • @drantoswyrick396
    @drantoswyrick396 Před rokem +1

    CO2 is actually SSS. Chiral SFC lets you separate complex enantiomers mixtures on large scale, in the industry we don't even bother with asymetric synthesis methods anymore as a result
    For pyridine, I don't recall having issues removing this solvent. I would run sulphonyl chloride coupling reactions in pyridine (cool 30 min reactions, acts as solvent, base and catalyst), vap off a good bit (in a rotavap under a fumehood, otherwise your lab mates will lynch you) and get rid of the rest with a mildly acidic work up (usually pure water at ph 5 does the job).

  • @louisgonzales4987
    @louisgonzales4987 Před rokem +1

    Dmso can be removed by extractions, no problems for it!
    But i'am really surprising by the fact it's not miscible with ethers! I will try it the next time!
    Thanks for the tips!

    • @That_Chemist
      @That_Chemist  Před rokem

      It’s hard to get rid of every last bit without a column though

  • @Abdcwyxz
    @Abdcwyxz Před rokem +1

    I'd like to add that HMPA and DMPU are good solvents, but pretty toxic, for dissolving lithium salts aggregates. Like in the enol reactions, the HMPA/DMPU can prevent aggregation of multiple enolates to the same lithium center

  • @grantking4032
    @grantking4032 Před měsícem

    DCM is my favorite so far. It's been so good to me.

  • @nathanroyer1844
    @nathanroyer1844 Před rokem +1

    The DMF is kinda hard to remove but is easer to remove it with DCM, but some times I saw DMF peaks in a mas spectrum, so indead is hard to remove
    Also is one of the best solvents for peptide synthesis in column, because it dosolves really good all the aminoacids and couplers

    • @sylvainlectard7377
      @sylvainlectard7377 Před rokem +1

      AS I mentioned elsewhere in the comments, there is an azeotrope between n-heptane and DMF. When using heavy solvents, using azetropic distillation when possible is very effective.

  • @diablominero
    @diablominero Před rokem

    DMSO can carry solutes through skin. It's used in some topical medications to make them absorb faster.

  • @Sniperboy5551
    @Sniperboy5551 Před 8 měsíci

    I’m glad you mentioned cannabinoids in reference to CO2 😉

  • @TimothyReeves
    @TimothyReeves Před rokem +3

    I thought for sure carbon dioxide would go in S Tier, since it's essential for soda pop.

  • @lurkmoar3926
    @lurkmoar3926 Před 8 měsíci

    💡3:05 I would have thought that 1,2 dichloroethane is nonpolar and 1,1 dichloroethane is polar. Is that not correct?

  • @vigneshr5182
    @vigneshr5182 Před rokem +2

    I'm bit concerned with HFIP in S tier list due to corrosive and highly volatile nature but it's still best in terms of having great H-bonding properties...

  • @aluminumchemist2586
    @aluminumchemist2586 Před rokem +1

    Do you know why it is commonly called MTBE? By all accounts, it should be tert-butyl methyl ether, if we are to use proper alphabetical priority. Aldrich also lists it that way, but I've never seen anyone refer to it as TBME.

  • @JimmyJamesJ
    @JimmyJamesJ Před rokem +1

    I am very much enjoying ethanol right now while watching this video. Trying to dissolve my problems.

  • @blueredbrick
    @blueredbrick Před rokem +1

    Lol, I love acetone and ipa so much I have two flask on display in my living room.

  • @DigitalLee
    @DigitalLee Před měsícem

    Hello, thank you very much for your videos. Please tell me what is the best way to dissolve POM in a 3D printed part. It is used as a polymer binder in 17-4 metal filament. I found that dichloroethane and tetrahydrofuran work if you heat them to 60 degrees, but apparently these are very dangerous substances, and you should not start working with them without understanding the chemistry. Especially with tetrahydrofuran.

    • @That_Chemist
      @That_Chemist  Před měsícem

      You could try 2-methyl tetrahydrofuran

  • @gandalf8216
    @gandalf8216 Před 10 měsíci

    Acetone is cool because it rips apart anything that's organic and polar. Isopropanol is like acetone, but doesn't rip apart polymers such as plastics so you can clean plastics from residues and such. But the most useful will always be water, able to rip salts apart into its constituent ions.

  • @Chad-Giga.
    @Chad-Giga. Před měsícem +1

    What about n-propane? That was always my favorite for cannabis extraction-in a past life.

  • @randy0120
    @randy0120 Před rokem +1

    How do you
    Put DMA below DMF?!? Wash it with a 2% LiCl solution and it washes right away. It’s so nice.

  • @douro20
    @douro20 Před 3 měsíci

    Ultrapure water is such a good solvent that it can actually be hazardous- there is a story of a guy visiting Super-Kamiokande in Japan who accidentally got a bit of his unusually long hair in the water and ended up with it falling out the next day...

  • @iryanmadayana1904
    @iryanmadayana1904 Před rokem +1

    There are quite a few solvents that inhabit the same general space as DMF and DMSO, of "I want to dissolve everything, including various metal salts, workup be damned!", but which are therefore very annoying to use. N-methyl pyrrolidone, propylene carbonate, sulfolane, and of course, HMPA (i.e. "liquid cancer"). I also wonder if triethyl amine would deserve recognition here if only for use as an additive in column chromatography of basic compounds.
    Overall, reasonable placements for everything. Pyridine can still go to hell~

    • @TimothyReeves
      @TimothyReeves Před rokem

      Always wanted to try using propylene carbonate but never got a chance

  • @user-gy6jw1ft8p
    @user-gy6jw1ft8p Před 4 měsíci

    Actually, this video is very important, and to be more specific sir please upload one by one row from all of them. My work is on HFIP and need some information.

    • @That_Chemist
      @That_Chemist  Před 4 měsíci

      Just send me a DM on discord and I’d be happy to help

  • @stephenjacks8196
    @stephenjacks8196 Před rokem +1

    Dioxane (and Diglyme) complexes Sodium so Sodium Borohydride and Sodium Aluminum Hydride are somewhat soluble.

  • @NormReitzel
    @NormReitzel Před rokem +1

    Pyridine: Yeah, solvent. But you will reek for days!

  • @noahater5785
    @noahater5785 Před rokem

    In order for carbon dioxide to be usable as a solvent though, you have to make it go supercritical which seems a bit difficult to do, it needs to be pressurized all the way to 1,073 psi (7.4 MPa if using metric), it’s critical temperature of of 87.9*F (31.89*C) shouldn’t be too hard to reach though assuming you’re starting from room temperature

  • @Gorihoodini
    @Gorihoodini Před rokem

    Which solvent would be the best to extract the freebase of cocaine after an amonnia tritation? Ether, Chloroform, Hexane, or another?

  • @jacobmcguire106
    @jacobmcguire106 Před 5 měsíci

    Dichloromethane is easily the best solvent to use for separating the bioactive ingredients from phytomedicinals.

  • @noobulon4334
    @noobulon4334 Před rokem +1

    Not a chemist but I dabble in chemical processes to make things (resin 3d printing, etching metals, anodizing)
    I really appreciate ethanol as a solvent for its human compatability. It makes relatively few vapors, isnt irritating or toxic in any reasonable quantity, its just a joy to have around

  • @enesince6329
    @enesince6329 Před rokem +2

    "I quite enjoy ethanol" Yeah I bet you do ;D

  • @Polarwolf98
    @Polarwolf98 Před 4 měsíci

    I disagree with leaving toxicity out of the rating. Mandatory safety precautions at my workplace definetly play a major role in which solvents I choose to work with and I regularly use non-ideal solvents because they are less toxic.
    For example, I regularly substitute CPME for Toluene because CPME has less servere hazard statements.
    We've also phased out diethyl ether almost completely, becuase we would have to monitor it for peroxide buildup every other month Something which we are not required to do with tert-butyl-methyl-ether, because it barely forms peroxides.

  • @intergalacticspacepirate
    @intergalacticspacepirate Před 3 měsíci

    Because of the birch reduction of pseudoephedrine into methamphetamine I would give anhydrous ammonia an F too

  • @alisonberzins1107
    @alisonberzins1107 Před rokem +2

    Shocked that deuterated-deuterated chloroform didn't make the list, appalling Figueroa erasure

  • @alexabbey1
    @alexabbey1 Před rokem +5

    Someone said to me once that "heptane was better than hexane in a particular situation because it was more selective" .
    Then on the contrary someone who got a 1st in chem said
    "pentane, hexane, heptane. It all makes very little difference it all depends on the boiling point you're after. So Pentane is ideal for most chemistry extactions when your after a non polar solvent."
    Is anyone right or wrong in this and could someone explain a bit more or link me to a video which can fill me in more. Thank you in advance.

    • @That_Chemist
      @That_Chemist  Před rokem +5

      I would say that there is little difference

    • @stephenjacks8196
      @stephenjacks8196 Před rokem

      @@That_Chemist EPA method for extraction of PCBs in soil used Soxlet extraction using Isooctane. More selective than Heptane because branched chain. BP 110°C. "Octane rating" (free radical inhibition) Isooctane defined as 100 and Heptane octane rating is zero.

    • @sylvainlectard7377
      @sylvainlectard7377 Před rokem

      chemically very little difference but, n-pentane is too volatile and smell quite strongly om my opinion. n-Hexane, though the most widely used because of flash chromatography is toxic. it is metabolized into hexan-2,5-dione which is the toxic component. n-Heptane is a little heavier so more difficult to remove but it forms azeotropes with many other way more difficult to remove solvents, including pyridine and DMF. In industrial laboratories we prefer to use n-heptane (less volatile and less toxic) as well as methylcyclohexane. Cyclohexane is also quite good there but its "high" meting point (7 ºC) could be a problem in an industrial process.

    • @stephenjacks8196
      @stephenjacks8196 Před rokem

      @@sylvainlectard7377 I think you are using tech grade pentane which has added odorant. "Chemically pure" (chromatography grade) Pentane doesn't have added odorant. Alcohol tax is charged for Chromatography Grade Ethanol because it is eminently drinkable.

    • @stephenjacks8196
      @stephenjacks8196 Před rokem

      @@sylvainlectard7377 Old school. For routine non-polar extraction, many labs use liquid CO2 apparatus. Easy peasy and no fire hazard.

  • @JimmyJamesJ
    @JimmyJamesJ Před rokem

    11:26 Ah, yes, acetone. One of my favourite solvents. Turns ABS plastic to liquid, then back to solid because it's so volatile that it evaporates out of the plastic. Dissolves the pine gum off my car. It's so volatile and such a good solvent that it absorbs through my skin and dissolves my liver and kidneys right out of my body. Acetone is among the best of the best. Anything that can't kill you isn't very good at its job. To hell with your biodegradable, low VOC crap. I'm sticking to acetone, 35% H2O2 and 12M HCl. Also, low conductive DI water for polar stuff. Wish I could get CCl4 at the hardware store.

  • @bruceschneier6283
    @bruceschneier6283 Před rokem +2

    Ethanol is S tier. How many of these solvents can readily extract active compounds from plant matter and still be immediately safe for human consumption

  • @7508joey
    @7508joey Před 4 měsíci

    I was hoping you would rate glycerol, I find it an okay solvent, does the job and adorable.

  • @WielkiKaleson
    @WielkiKaleson Před rokem +2

    And what about N-methylpyrrolidone and HMPA?

  • @samiraperi467
    @samiraperi467 Před rokem

    Isopropanol is great stuff, essential if you work with electronics.

  • @AB-80X
    @AB-80X Před 7 měsíci

    No Pinacolyl?

  • @batkid317
    @batkid317 Před rokem +1

    Solvent tier lists? Instant subscription on CZcams and Patreon

  • @bemanos12345
    @bemanos12345 Před rokem +1

    pyridine dissolves in water, so its easy to remove it by washing the product with water.

  • @kalico66
    @kalico66 Před rokem

    why no dcm?

  • @sealpiercing8476
    @sealpiercing8476 Před rokem +1

    Apparently ether is the best functional group for a solvent.

  • @eucompsa
    @eucompsa Před rokem

    Doesn't carbon disulfide explode in rotavacs?

  • @bulldogmadhav5762
    @bulldogmadhav5762 Před 2 měsíci

    I always wonder why people don’t consider the environmental impact of solvent choices

  • @lurkmoar3926
    @lurkmoar3926 Před 8 měsíci

    💡6:13 Google says carbon dioxide is nonpolar and I agree.

  • @avael2451
    @avael2451 Před rokem +2

    I unironically like working with teratogens, it makes being infertile a bonus LOL

  • @bkey6959
    @bkey6959 Před rokem

    I have synthesized organic compound, work up with water and then extraction is not happening with EtOAc .. Why is it so??

    • @That_Chemist
      @That_Chemist  Před rokem +1

      Probably your stuff is just water soluble

    • @bkey6959
      @bkey6959 Před rokem

      I have lots of aromatic ring attached to the molecule.. Is organic compound soluble in water?

  • @aajjeee
    @aajjeee Před rokem +3

    What are you smoking where CO2 and benzene are polar

    • @That_Chemist
      @That_Chemist  Před rokem +4

      Benzene is quadrupolar and CO2 may not have any net dipole, but the C=O bonds are polar, so CO2 is good at dissolving polar molecules (e.g. caffeine)

  • @nelson1tom
    @nelson1tom Před rokem

    You should do best dueterated solvents🎃

  • @KL005
    @KL005 Před rokem +2

    BOOM

  • @deuca.f
    @deuca.f Před 5 měsíci +1

    6:12 CO2 is polar???

  • @BirdRaiserE
    @BirdRaiserE Před rokem +1

    Water is my favorite, I need it to live

  • @chemistryofquestionablequa6252

    Carbon disulfide. Four words: white phosphorus water gun...

    • @That_Chemist
      @That_Chemist  Před rokem +1

      Mn2O7 water gun

    • @chemistryofquestionablequa6252
      @chemistryofquestionablequa6252 Před rokem

      @@That_Chemist gonna have to make it out of glass, and doesn't that stuff just sometimes say fuck it and explosively decompose for no apparent reason

  • @oberstvilla1271
    @oberstvilla1271 Před 3 měsíci

    I have missed HMPA.

  • @enriquelichtenstein6675
    @enriquelichtenstein6675 Před rokem +1

    I like ethanol too