You're honestly a savour, my paper 2 is tomorrow and I'm speeding through your videos. I've never understood this before and struggled with remembering all the required mechanisms. I actually feel like I have a chance to pass now. Thank you
Sir as there is time left for the exam please make more videos like this. I just love how you style your videos and your explanation is amazing. Please make videos about organic chemistry A levels such as hard subjects like amines in A2, condensation polymers. You can even focus on the required practicals and what we need to know for each if u want. I just want to thank you SO MUCH for your hardwork and the amount of time you put in this videos. I am for sure going to recommend you to other people. Thank U!!!
I really appreciate the kind words Shayna :) I will try, but I'm not a teacher and really limited with time atm so trying to focus more on the topic analysis videos. We will see though 😉
thank you so much for these videos! ive been going through all of your videos during this last week of revison for paper 1 :) if you can, please make more videos on electrochemistry because i never get marks on any of those questions,, again ty!!!!
I have a couple electrode potential/electrochemistry vids on the channel, have u checked them out? if so, is there anything you struggle with specifically? It's a heavy redox knowledge topic tbh
This video is amazing! Just a bit of criticism though, you forgot to mention that carboxylate salts are used in soap, which is something you need to know (its in the spec)!!!
Sure, I plan to :) Are there any topics you struggle with specifically? It is quite difficult with the copyrighting exam board have put on their content, but I will try my best
There aren't really any purely esters questions tbh, and if there are they're simple so I don't think it will be that helpful. It's mainly joint with other aspects of carboxylic acids topic like acyl chlorides and acid anhydrides etc.
Hello! At 27:31, for question 4, can we say "Carboxylic acids and alcohols contain hydrogen bonding, whereas esters contain dipole-dipole forces. Hydrogen bonds are stronger than dipole-dipole forces. Therefore, it requires more energy to break the hydrogen bonds. Hence, esters have lower b.p" ?. Great video!
for hydrolysis in acidic conditions, H2SO4 is fine instead of HCl, but it MUST be dilute, not conc. :) you can read up more about it on chemrevise or chemguide if u want www.chemguide.co.uk/organicprops/esters/hydrolysis.html
just released one today on every transition metal ligand substitution, plus some extra info :) hopefully that helps. Will do my best to release more before paper 1. There are also multiple past paper transition metal question walkthroughs
@@easymodeexams33 Thank you sir, also I have been getting questions wrong for the electrode potentials and cells topic. I'm not sure if my knowledge is lacking, could you also do a video on that and on bonding topic ?
that isn't under this section of the specification, it is under acyl chlorides and acid anhydrides, I have made a video on those reactions and mechanisms
If you want to absolutely COOK your Chem exams, apply for my tuition: forms.gle/7xMUS6pSaU5BkgfSA
You're honestly a savour, my paper 2 is tomorrow and I'm speeding through your videos. I've never understood this before and struggled with remembering all the required mechanisms. I actually feel like I have a chance to pass now. Thank you
Good luck :)
Sir as there is time left for the exam please make more videos like this. I just love how you style your videos and your explanation is amazing. Please make videos about organic chemistry A levels such as hard subjects like amines in A2, condensation polymers. You can even focus on the required practicals and what we need to know for each if u want. I just want to thank you SO MUCH for your hardwork and the amount of time you put in this videos. I am for sure going to recommend you to other people. Thank U!!!
I really appreciate the kind words Shayna :) I will try, but I'm not a teacher and really limited with time atm so trying to focus more on the topic analysis videos. We will see though 😉
I love this channel! Thank you so much for your work!
Thnx :) no worries, good luck!
ur a life saver thank you so much man
This guy is godly
THANK YOU SO MUCH
thank you so much for these videos! ive been going through all of your videos during this last week of revison for paper 1 :) if you can, please make more videos on electrochemistry because i never get marks on any of those questions,, again ty!!!!
I have a couple electrode potential/electrochemistry vids on the channel, have u checked them out? if so, is there anything you struggle with specifically? It's a heavy redox knowledge topic tbh
Thank you so much for your videos, they're so helpful! I hope you gain more subscribers because you really deserve it, thank you so much
I'm glad you find them helpful, thnx for your kind comment :)
thanks u actual legend appreciate u! last exam today hopefully goes well :)
I hope it did go well :)
Thanks for the video I really like what you've done with your channel.
thanks :)
This video is amazing! Just a bit of criticism though, you forgot to mention that carboxylate salts are used in soap, which is something you need to know (its in the spec)!!!
Good point, thanks! This was my bad, I may remake this video when I have time. good luck!
could you do more exam walkthroughs please? you explain very well
Sure, I plan to :) Are there any topics you struggle with specifically? It is quite difficult with the copyrighting exam board have put on their content, but I will try my best
Could make videos on graph skills and interpretation,please?
Hi. Great video as always. Could you do an AQA walkthrough on an esters question if possible please? Thanks :)
There aren't really any purely esters questions tbh, and if there are they're simple so I don't think it will be that helpful. It's mainly joint with other aspects of carboxylic acids topic like acyl chlorides and acid anhydrides etc.
@@easymodeexams33 fair enough. Thanks man
Hello! At 27:31, for question 4, can we say "Carboxylic acids and alcohols contain hydrogen bonding, whereas esters contain dipole-dipole forces. Hydrogen bonds are stronger than dipole-dipole forces. Therefore, it requires more energy to break the hydrogen bonds. Hence, esters have lower b.p" ?. Great video!
Thank you so much this was super useful
happy to help :)
i thought because acid catalyst you need to make esters is conc h2so4 hence the hydrolysis process should also need conc h2so4. am i wrong?
for hydrolysis in acidic conditions, H2SO4 is fine instead of HCl, but it MUST be dilute, not conc. :) you can read up more about it on chemrevise or chemguide if u want www.chemguide.co.uk/organicprops/esters/hydrolysis.html
Very helpful, thanks alot
no worries, good luck!
make a video on polymerisation please!!
During esterification, isnt it that the OH comes from the carboxylic acid and just the H from the alcohol?
Thank you
could you do one video explaining transition metal? struggling to understand it.
just released one today on every transition metal ligand substitution, plus some extra info :) hopefully that helps. Will do my best to release more before paper 1. There are also multiple past paper transition metal question walkthroughs
@@easymodeexams33 Thank you sir, also I have been getting questions wrong for the electrode potentials and cells topic. I'm not sure if my knowledge is lacking, could you also do a video on that and on bonding topic ?
why was he laughing at 20:20 loooooooool
How come you didn’t include the reaction between acid anhydrides and alcohols to form esters ?
that isn't under this section of the specification, it is under acyl chlorides and acid anhydrides, I have made a video on those reactions and mechanisms
chill with the adds
youtube automatically puts them through the video, I've deleted a bunch