Smelly Chemistry - Periodic Table of Videos

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  • čas přidán 26. 08. 2024
  • Mercaptans - or Thiols - are some of the smelliest chemicals around. We didn't dare open the bottle.
    PsyFile: / psyfile
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    From the School of Chemistry at The University of Nottingham: www.nottingham....
    Periodic Videos films are by video journalist Brady Haran: www.bradyharan....
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    / foodskey (Food science)
    / backstagescience (Big science facilities)
    / favscientist (Favourite scientists)
    / bibledex (Academic look at the Bible)
    / wordsoftheworld (Modern language and culture)
    / philosophyfile (Philosophy stuff)

Komentáře • 386

  • @br0sRchill
    @br0sRchill Před 11 lety +55

    0:37 "le stink"

  • @andreibusuable
    @andreibusuable Před 11 lety +34

    You guys make chemistry so interesting.

  • @AntiProtonBoy
    @AntiProtonBoy Před 11 lety +50

    I'd love to get my hands on a Tellurium based stink bomb.

  • @fackingpos
    @fackingpos Před 9 lety +139

    Fart in your general direction!!!!

  • @MichelDellaCompta
    @MichelDellaCompta Před 10 lety +39

    I live in the city where the mercaptan leak happened, it was pretty bad..

  • @Obsidus
    @Obsidus Před 11 lety +40

    Prof. Poliakoff is amazing.

  • @karmakazi219
    @karmakazi219 Před 11 lety +24

    On a "normal day" there are 8000 gas leak reports?!?!

  • @TheChemiKid
    @TheChemiKid Před 10 lety +117

    Anyone hear breaking glass @ 3:53?

  • @adfkjgvdjfvbdbvdkjvb
    @adfkjgvdjfvbdbvdkjvb Před 11 lety +23

    the line "I fart in your general direction" springs to mind... ;)

  • @Mivalys
    @Mivalys Před 11 lety +13

    "...to see how her hair compares to mine." I loved that argument. :)

  • @SrikarManepalli
    @SrikarManepalli Před 9 lety +20

    Nice tie Professor

  • @PINGPONGROCKSBRAH
    @PINGPONGROCKSBRAH Před 10 lety +197

    "Professor Moody" lol did anyone else think of Harry Potter?

  • @pmarceau
    @pmarceau Před 11 lety +3

    I find it interesting that a dog's sense of smell is so much more sensitive than ours, yet bad odors seem to bother them much less, if at all.

  • @SnowRaptor
    @SnowRaptor Před 11 lety +1

    A few years ago, a truck carrying mercaptans tumbler over in São Paulo, triggering lots of phone calls to the firemen and to the gas company even from the other side of the city. One biker asked me in the car what happened and it took me some time to explain to him.

  • @DevilMaster
    @DevilMaster Před 11 lety +2

    Reason #1 is that the smell of grapefruit is not ONLY due to thiols. Reason #2 is that a substance can be perceived as having a different smell dipending on its concentration: for example indole, which smells like flowers at low concentrations, while it smells like shit (literally) at high concentrations.

  • @PKFreezeBETA
    @PKFreezeBETA Před 11 lety +1

    It doesn't really do anything chemical, it just fools your nose into not smelling the skunk spray as much. basically, what happens is your nose gets used to smelling the skunk smell, and after a while it stops smelling quite as strong, and the tomato juices more pleasant odour is enough to mask the skunk smell. to anyone who hasn't been around the smell for very long, it still smells awful. the process is called olfactory fatigue.

  • @sazarod
    @sazarod Před 11 lety +1

    Major points for plugging the vibration theory of olfaction!

  • @pecfree
    @pecfree Před 11 lety +5

    WE LOVE YOU PROFESSOR! KEEP THE VIDEOS COMING GUYS!

  • @_starter
    @_starter Před 11 lety +29

    And then it would be a bit late.

  • @RokitScientist1987
    @RokitScientist1987 Před 11 lety +2

    Awesome content. I'm astonished by the amount of detail and the amount of interesting and useful information shared.

  • @heyandy889
    @heyandy889 Před 11 lety +2

    brady haran is like the johnny appleseed of CZcams
    spreading knowledge far and wide

  • @dflxxhunterxx2
    @dflxxhunterxx2 Před 11 lety +1

    Hey periodic Videos!
    I happen to work in an oil refinery in Germany, where we actually remove naturally occurring Mercaptans from Propane and Butane using NaOH to bind them and then oxidize them with air (and some catalytic wizardry ;-) )

  • @jbrowsingj
    @jbrowsingj Před 11 lety +3

    Fantastic work again, Brady!
    I'm subscribed to all of your channels, and really excited to see where you'll take them.
    I really appreciate how non-technical you keep them, but could you post links or a full title of any papers that are discussed in the videos?
    Thanks!

  • @BeastOfTraal
    @BeastOfTraal Před 11 lety +2

    You should do a video on chirality (left handed vs right handed molecules)

  • @mixolydian2010
    @mixolydian2010 Před 11 lety +4

    Brilliant love all these videos..it is my current favourite channel. Thank you all very much for your work on these productions and especially to the prof for his humble and clear explanations of the chemistry involved.

  • @killzonia
    @killzonia Před 11 lety

    They're talking about optical isomerism, or chirality, which involves molecules that are non-superimposable mirror images of one another (put one of your hands on top of the other; they are the same shape but are non-superimposable). They are identical in most ways apart from a few, such as how they rotate plane polarised light or, more relevantly, how they interact with biological receptors, i.e. how they smell, taste, etc.

  • @TheWanderingChemist
    @TheWanderingChemist Před 11 lety +5

    You forgot about furfurylthiol! The coffee smell! :D

  • @ltericdavis2237
    @ltericdavis2237 Před 11 lety

    If your confused, numberphile (a show made by the same guy who produces these videos, in case you don't know), made a video explaining that. CZcams's counting system stops at around 300, so it can add advertisements, if I remember that correctly.

  • @KoenigNord
    @KoenigNord Před 11 lety +2

    I used thiols for a long time, since they bind on elemental gold very well. with this, you can create amazingly useful functional surfaces.
    Luckily my thiols were to big to smell :)

  • @urost032
    @urost032 Před 11 lety +1

    Good question. The most amazing fact about some thiols is that you can actually smell some of them in very highly diluted forms, and when in low concentrations they tend to smell quite nice(just to give you the perspective of how diluted they have to be in order to smell good(this is not in general): 1 mg of thiol per 10000000 dm3 of H2O! Amazing, ha!) Also, grapefruit contains some other compunds which give smell to it(mostly esters).

  • @Nikolaii2571
    @Nikolaii2571 Před 11 lety

    Mercaptans are also used to synthesize a sedative-hypnotic called "SULFONAL" and "TRIONAL" which were widely in use a century ago..
    Sulfonal was a condensation reaction of Ethyl mercaptan and Acetone.

  • @claaaaams
    @claaaaams Před 11 lety +1

    excellent episode. thanks

  • @Gibbsbc1
    @Gibbsbc1 Před 11 lety +1

    That is some quite good evolutionary psychology.

  • @qwaqwa1960
    @qwaqwa1960 Před 11 lety

    I've attended a *couple* of lectures that talked about the apparent quantum effects in smell (and other biological processes)!

  • @Jnashalt
    @Jnashalt Před 11 lety +2

    An introduction to an eduational kit employing the sense of smell for teaching chemistry developed by Simon Rees, Rebecca Edwards, and Jacob Cox through the Royal Society of Chemistry, Educational Techniques Group and Durham University.

  • @KennyTheB
    @KennyTheB Před 11 lety +1

    I can't speak explicitly for that particular compound, but generally, compounds that utilize heavier elements in this manner tend to become pretty toxic pretty quickly.

  • @khajiit92
    @khajiit92 Před 11 lety +2

    elements heavier than iron come from that explosion you just mentioned. our sun is a second generation star, the heavier elements in our solar system come from an older star that exploded.

  • @jmrdelorean
    @jmrdelorean Před 11 lety

    being a chemist the worst thiol I had to deal with was the diester of thiol succinic acid. You had the wonderful sweet smell of the ester with the rottenness of the thiol. It was awful. If even a trace was spilled you'd smell it for weeks.

  • @heyandy889
    @heyandy889 Před 11 lety

    the professor did say something about that. apparently natural gas/methane has no smell, so something, like one of these thiols, is added in order to let people detect the gas.

  • @djmussy18
    @djmussy18 Před 11 lety +1

    Thank you for this wonderful video.

  • @dodgevipr44
    @dodgevipr44 Před 11 lety +1

    I've heard that the texture on the surface of the mentos permits the carbonation of the drink somewhere to attach, and it makes the soda fizz up.

  • @mauroprovatos
    @mauroprovatos Před 11 lety +8

    I was expecting Brady to have a sniff test.

  • @tybo09
    @tybo09 Před 11 lety +1

    Sorry for another question: Is the mercaptan's mercury capturing ability related to the sulfur atom? I ask because we have mercury spill kits in our equipment shop and they all contain powdered sulfur.

  • @WolfDOuka
    @WolfDOuka Před 11 lety +2

    I think you should do a video on the chemicals in the brain and what their function is. One interesting video could be also what if the chemicals in the human body are not balanced. :)

  • @awimachinegun
    @awimachinegun Před 11 lety

    he has some good criticisms and additions.

  • @nowiecoche
    @nowiecoche Před 11 lety

    I wouldn't name "2,2-dimethyl-ethanethiol" b/c the parent chain should be named with the longest number of carbons, which is propane. But the difference between "2-methyl-2-propanethiol" and "2-methyl-2-thiol-propane", I don't know. The thiol and propane belong to two different functional groups so it has to do with that.

  • @Nexus2Eden
    @Nexus2Eden Před 11 lety

    How funny you should do this video now. I was just talking with a friend about how Skunk smell (from a dead Skunk - road kill). I was commenting on how the odor, like Camphor, sticks like glue and lasts so long. I postulated it was because they are aromatic rings, and quite stable. So the phenol compound would persist and must be highly reactive. ...and here is video on it, brilliant! :D

  • @ThinkingSpeck
    @ThinkingSpeck Před 11 lety

    As I understand it, we evolved that revulsion because spoiled food tends to contain thiols. It's not that the thiols themselves are toxic in those quantities - it's just that they're very easy to detect and they tended to be associated with other chemicals which were dangerous to us.

  • @akkudakkupl
    @akkudakkupl Před 11 lety

    Probably the same way we make heavy atoms - colisions. Also its not just - out of H start fusing He, out of He start to fuse Li. Because then we would end up with mostly even atomic numbered elements.

  • @KialraOfDeath
    @KialraOfDeath Před 11 lety +1

    Strawman argument, beautiful.

  • @hunnis12
    @hunnis12 Před 11 lety

    Prof. Moody and Prof. Moriaty?
    You're the best..

  • @HolyBookProductions
    @HolyBookProductions Před 11 lety

    One of the best Chanels on CZcams

  • @rurichek1
    @rurichek1 Před 8 lety +16

    What chemical is responsible for the fecal smell?

  • @justrockthisworld
    @justrockthisworld Před 11 lety +8

    i smelt it :( a lot of the alarms in the city went crazy :)) i'm happy that now i know exactly what it was. thank you! :)

  • @PatoPatoEloElo
    @PatoPatoEloElo Před 11 lety

    Glad to the that professor was on a good mood

  • @TheWildHaggis
    @TheWildHaggis Před 11 lety +1

    This video reeks of great stories!

  • @boboblaw
    @boboblaw Před 11 lety

    BRADY!!! why must you make more channels for me to subscribe to????? i already have 188!!!!.......189 now guh, damn you and your ability to know exactly what i want to watch.

  • @Syltibob
    @Syltibob Před 11 lety +1

    Does this mean that you can get rid of the smell from skunks with bleach?

  • @stepb24
    @stepb24 Před 11 lety

    We use 2-mercaptoethanol in the lab and that stuff is stinky! Another stinky smell is anaerobic bacteria. It is amazing how such a tiny thing could stink so badly!

  • @danieljryba
    @danieljryba Před 11 lety

    The Prof. Should make a video explaining Right-handed vs. Left-handed molecules.

  • @awesomemattg
    @awesomemattg Před 11 lety

    Is this a similar reason as why necrotic or burning flesh has a terrible stench, like when you have electro-surgery or smell dead animals?

  • @knockdoun
    @knockdoun Před 11 lety

    My Paramedical Biology Teacher once brought Durian fruit to show the class, the moment she took it out of the plastic the pungent smell filled the room and lots of people in the school thought there was a gas leak.

  • @callumwatson7582
    @callumwatson7582 Před 11 lety +1

    I love these videos

  • @CaptTerrific
    @CaptTerrific Před 11 lety

    Any chance we could see a followup to the sodium/water video, where you make better use of that amazing phantom camera? Thunderfoot made some very interesting observations about your theories, and the potential for the Periodic Videos to actually contribute to a new scientific discovery, instead of simply giving demos, would be amazing!

  • @astaiannymph
    @astaiannymph Před 11 lety

    I love that the selling point for psyfile is to compare his daughter's hair.

  • @MakuziTheInuk
    @MakuziTheInuk Před 11 lety +1

    if he was my science teacher i would love science again

  • @Jotto999
    @Jotto999 Před 11 lety

    I've read the series throughout, grew up on it. I was thinking how it'd be during the series, I probably because I've been reading HP:MOR lately.

  • @Bsgetsreal
    @Bsgetsreal Před 11 lety +1

    Your tie is awesome!

  • @krazyking424
    @krazyking424 Před 11 lety

    Is it possible that there is a mechanism in the nose to isolate the sulphur-hydrogen bond from the triols? Then we would just be recognizing that bonded pair. I guess the issue would be if that bod was stable and how much energy would go into isolating it (also if that is actually how it's done)...

  • @stumbling
    @stumbling Před 11 lety

    As the prof said, many foodstuffs give off hydrogen-sulphides when they rot.

  • @en4rab
    @en4rab Před 11 lety

    There is a talk from TED.com on youtube here: watch?v=yzOcvINn8Iw in which Luca Turin talks about why he believes we smell vibrational frequency's and a possible mechanism for it and how he founded a company making scents for the perfume industry based on this. I found it quite compelling.

  • @vgoj
    @vgoj Před 11 lety

    superb as usual.
    Got ot love Prof. Poliakoff.

  • @ThinkingSpeck
    @ThinkingSpeck Před 11 lety

    Martyn, you say you find it very unlikely that thiols' bad smell to humans is due to the vibration - you suggest instead an evolutionary explanation. I agree with your evolutionary explanation as the ultimate cause, but there must also be a proximate cause or mechanism (which I think is probably vibrational frequency).
    For instance, (most) birds can fly: ultimately because flight was evolutionarily advantageous in the distant past, but proximately because they now have wings and so on.

  • @Quintinohthree
    @Quintinohthree Před 11 lety

    That'd be butyric acid, or butanoic acid if systematic names are more your thing. It smells because there are receptors for it in our noses. We have these receptors because it occurs in rotten foods.

  • @dragonbalism
    @dragonbalism Před 11 lety

    I like periodically glancing at his tie.

  • @adavewiley
    @adavewiley Před 11 lety

    My high school biology teacher wanted to teach us why asparagus pee smelled the way it did. He opened a bottle of methyl mercaptan in the fume hood without noting the boiling point. It boiled away immediately, went up the fume hood, across the roof, and back down in the windows. We had to stand outside for a few hours, but I never forgot asparagus's secret ingredient.

  • @ammelr
    @ammelr Před 11 lety

    A few months ago, the Japanese isolated a compound that smells like vanilla from cow manure. Indol is commonly used in perfume, but also contributes to making poop stink. A little thiol makes garlic and grapefruit smell good, a lot smells like rotten eggs. Chemistry is very strange.

  • @123456789robbie
    @123456789robbie Před 11 lety

    there's a guy who makes videos called thunderf00t, and he's been recently making references to periodic videos

  • @UnicornStarShip
    @UnicornStarShip Před 11 lety

    When you talk about "left hand" and "right hand" compounds- are you talking about cis and trans isomers? One of the few things I still remember from a university chemistry class 10+ years ago....

  • @ImRichRu
    @ImRichRu Před 11 lety

    mercaptans with selenium..... NOW that is a lovely smell

  • @salvatoreshiggerino6810
    @salvatoreshiggerino6810 Před 11 lety

    I once had the displeasure of working as an orderly in a mental institution where an inmate had been shitting all over his cell. I emptied a whole bottle of sodium hypochlorite solution all over the place and almost killed myself with the fumes, but it was all worth it. I'm a huge fan of hypochlorites.

  • @neverXuploadXvideos
    @neverXuploadXvideos Před 11 lety

    Can someone explain to me the nomenclature of 2-methyl-2-propanethiol? The compound looks like it ought to be called 2-methyl-2-thiol-propane. or 2,2-dimethyl-ethanethiol

  • @inventorOz84
    @inventorOz84 Před 11 lety

    what about Betamercaptoethanol which we use as a reducing agents in the biochem?

  • @xnax1993
    @xnax1993 Před 11 lety +1

    God, I love the professor!

  • @heyandy889
    @heyandy889 Před 11 lety

    not a bad idea! Maybe a little bit of smoke of some sort? Or maybe something shiny?

  • @JonesAndGriesmann
    @JonesAndGriesmann Před 11 lety

    I have a question for you. When the Snow melts where does the White go?

  • @98JMA
    @98JMA Před 11 lety

    Quite probably, the entire room and building would have to be evacuated until the smell was removed...perhaps via oxidation of the thiol?

  • @melekhthechanger88
    @melekhthechanger88 Před 11 lety +1

    I have made grapefuirt mercaptan before from pulegone and H2S :) it really really smells bad as I had to make 17grams of it!

  • @Leibniz97
    @Leibniz97 Před 11 lety

    Well yea I know that stars fuse light elements in order to create heavier elements, put this only happens up to a point. When the core of the star starts to contain too much iron, it explodes. Therefore we can only get elements up to iron from the stars. But where did elements heavier than iron come from?

  • @tossabaddle
    @tossabaddle Před 11 lety +4

    They even have a professor Moody. I have to visit this university ^^

  • @bojor7
    @bojor7 Před 11 lety

    i always love to see a gorgeous Schlenk Line!!!, keep bringing Organometallic Chemistry

  • @Syzygy2048
    @Syzygy2048 Před 11 lety

    He said the building HAD to be evacuated, that sounds more like "shit just hit the fan, run for your life" - carries a completely different meaning than "the smell was so bad that people evacuated the building" which is more like "I can't stand this smell, fuck this shit I'm out of here"

  • @glenwoofit
    @glenwoofit Před 11 lety

    The idea of comparing hair with the proff did it for me! I'm off to "Go Compare, Go Compare"

  • @007bistromath
    @007bistromath Před 11 lety

    I had a thought while watching this video about why these chemicals might all smell so bad. It occurred to me that the characteristic carbon-sulfur-hydrogen group was like a hook, and the various mercaptans would be different things hanging off that hook. Perhaps our sense of smell works analogous to a scale, "weighing" whatever's on that hook. This would explain why the selenium and tellurium analogs are worse, as well.

  • @mathmusicminecraft
    @mathmusicminecraft Před 11 lety +5

    PROFFESOR MOODY!!

  • @johmedis
    @johmedis Před 11 lety

    You win the Nobel Prize in Witty Wordplay

  • @TheGhostbuster1989
    @TheGhostbuster1989 Před 11 lety

    sometimes, where the chemical is faceing is very important, especially when dealing with drugs.
    look for some thing called enantiomers (if i try to explain it, it would take me days)

  • @therobotFrom94
    @therobotFrom94 Před 11 lety

    Do the Selenium/Tellurium compounds have similar, but worse, smells to thiols? or are they different and worse

  • @ExtrasAreOrdinary
    @ExtrasAreOrdinary Před 11 lety

    Usually "R" denotes a hydrogen or a hydrocarbon side chain (of some length).

  • @MichaelZola
    @MichaelZola Před 11 lety

    thank you for the new channel recommendation