Dipole Forces
Вставка
- Опубліковано 30 чер 2024
- 017 - Dipole Forces
In this video Paul Andersen describes the intermolecular forces associated with dipoles. A dipole is a molecule that has split charge. Dipole may form associations with other dipoles, induced dipoles or ions. An important type of dipole-dipole forces are hydrogen bonds.
Music Attribution
Title: String Theory
Artist: Herman Jolly
sunsetvalley.bandcamp.com/trac...
All of the images are licensed under creative commons and public domain licensing:
"File:ADN Animation.gif." Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Accessed August 9, 2013. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:ADN....
"File:GC DNA Base Pair.svg." Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Accessed August 9, 2013. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:GC_....
"File:Hydrogen-chloride-3D-vdW.png." Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Accessed August 9, 2013. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Hyd....
"File:NaCl.png." Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Accessed August 9, 2013. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Na....
"File:Water Molecule 3D.svg." Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Accessed August 9, 2013. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Wat....
I've been watching your videos since high school... I've probably have said this, but I'll say it again... you sir are helping countless student who have been let down from their incompetent professors. Not to say they don't know anything in their field, but fail to discuss and make student understand concepts like these. Possibly gaining the student's interest in the process.
Watched these videos back in high school and now I'm back at it again in college. Thanks for all the work you do!
I hope you finished college... Lol
Thank you for this video and this channel. it's guys like you, Tyler DeWitt, Prof Leonard & Patrick JMT that give me hope for North American education. Combing through the internet for help has lead me to the following conclusion. "Teachers" don't really want to "teach" so much as they would like to project upon you, their current intellectual superiority. After I finally grasp a concept with regards to Chem, Phys or Calc, I'm always left thinking "they don't want to teach us. What they really want is for us to teach ourselves and pretend they helped". After finishing my 2nd year of electrical engineering, I can confidently state that I have never in my life had a good or even decent teacher, ESPECIALLY in S.T.E.M related subjects. I actually don't think they exist on the western hemisphere. The only kids that excel are the ones lucky enough to have parents that can afford private tutors. One has no hope of getting into a school like MIT with public HS education and no extra help from private tutors. Profs tend to try and teach, as if their students have already learned what they're teaching, which in and of itself is oxymoronic (or maybe just moronic). It's no wonder there is a shortage of STEM professionals in North America, THE TEACHERS FUCKING SUCK. Like "Hey class, today we will be discussing orbital hybridization, I won't tell you what it is or how it works but I'll show you this picture, that should be good enough" fucking assholes. Teachers always want to go on strike when they're not even good at their god damn jobs. Thank you again for this channel
Anderson and Tyler DeWitt are like my personal tutors. They got me an A in Chem 1 and I'm in Chem 2 now.
DeWitt is my spirit animal.
Yeah... Dewitt....
my fave tooo
your profile pic is the cutest thing
Thank you so much for the visuals! I'm homeschooling my daughter and needed something to help her better understand dipoles and water molecules. This did it!
just helpful..?
naaah u saved my life , just in few hours I have my final paper :)
thank u so much:)
I studied for 2 exams by watching your videos in 4 days, i never studied for them before and passed both of them. Thank you for making more sense in 4 days than what my teacher could in a year.
Is this for high school AP chemistry? If so, high school students are getting a better chemistry education than I am at university. Good video
lol thats what I'm using it for
i'm using it for chemistry 1 haha
honors chem! I'm taking ap physics asap
I’m in 8th grade and learning this
Thank you so much Mr Anderson! These videos are definitely helping me prepare for my chemistry final this Thursday! They are short, concise, and am learning much more than my textbook can!
I wish I can show these videos to my chemistry professor and say "That's how it's done you idiot"
+shaden hani Seriously! My chemistry professor makes it much more complicated than it needs to be.
My chemistry teacher sent us here. XD
+Sara McInnis-Misenor lol that made my day😂😂😂😂😂
Do it
if u dont like the rule go to the top and change it
I just want you to know who much you have saved my life. Thank you for making these videos!
Crystal-clear explanation of Dipole Forces. :) Millions of thanks!
Thank you for this video. Your videos have helped me through genetics, evolution, and now in chemistry. :)
This is brilliant. Explains everything in such an easy and understandable way, THANK YOU!
Thanks Mr. Anderson! Your videos have helped me so much this semester.
thank you! it is really useful for me to have a clear understanding on dipole-dipole interaction! :D
this channel is just soo helpful for me, keep up the good work.
well, you make it simple and easy to understand. thank you sir Andersen, it help me a lot.
Mr Andersen :D you are AMAZING :D always helpful :) THANK YOU
YOU ARE THE BEST!!!!!
just less than 8mins explained everything very very well!
Ying Wang yes! I had so much trouble with this in Gen Chem 1, and was worried this morning when it came back up in biochem. It makes so much sense now.
Thanks Mr. Andersen! Awesome explanation as always
These videos are so underrated. How are more people not watching them?
very helpful, very clear and easy to understand, will be checking out the rest of ur videos, subbed 👍
Thank you very much Mr. Andersen
I have a test tomorrow, and am quite lazy to read the book, but this summed it all up! It really helped. Thank you!
Youre fun to learn from Mr. Anderson, thank you!
simply great... it was crystal clear explaination...Thank u sir...
you're a genius. NO MORE FAILING CHEMISTRY!!! THANKS SIR
you are a living legend
Great videos. These are very helpful for students.
Thanks Mr.Anderson
You rock! I give reaction to every CHE video of you! Thanks a lot
Great video, thanks for the help.
That was really good.
excellent . We r eagerly awaiting ur new presentation
Great video, thanks for this.
My god, this dude's videos are better than anything I'm getting in college.
Great understandable video
This is very helpful, thank you so much ! :)
Incredibly helpfull!!!
You saved hours of reading :) thank you
nice and well explained! thank you :)
Thank you thank you very much. Please keep upload vedioes like that 👍👍👍👍👍👍
exelent channel man , great content
Respect :)
Couldnt resist a thanks..thanks alot sir
nice video..... it was explained very perfectly👍
Thank you, you explained it much better than my teacher did.
thanks for the video and what did u use for your intro
Very good explanation
This is... amazing
it was extremely helpful
Great video, very simplified yet full of information.
Does the formations H2S, H2Se and H2Te molecules bond the same way H2O molecules bond (each Hydrogen atom in a Water molecule bond with an Oxygen atom of another Water molecule making each Water molecule bond with 2 other water molecules) ?
No , because Hydrogen bond is only made with N , O and F only when they combine with Hydrogen . This is because the N, O and F is WAY more electronegative than the atoms you just mentioned about and they don't form Hydrogen bond , but will form the normal intermolecular forces between their atoms. HOPE IT HELPED
Mariam Khaled So this is only characterestic of Hydrogen and Oxygen bond right ?
See, Hydrogen makes a hydrogen bond with Oxygen ...but how ?
Hydrogen makes bond in a water molecule and it has a partial positive charge . This partial positive charge attracts one on the electrons present in the lone pair on the electronegative oxygen in another molecule . Hydrogen bond occurs as when hydrogen attached with an electronegative element another atom containing a lone pair with the electronegative element.
Make no mistake, we've taken only the water (H2O) as an example,but hydrogen bond takes place between all of the three O N F as long as the conditions stated in the definition above are stated.
HOPE IT HELPS
MK
great video
that was really helpful thank you so much
Thanks man helped alot for my reporting
thank you for teaching me everything my teacher can't
Thank you!!! You just save my SAT Biology test!!!
yeah bro!!!
QUESTION:
Are dipole-induced dipole forces exclusively with noble gases? Could hydrochloric acid cause a dipole-induced force on something like methane or some other molecule with its valence electron shell full?
You are the best
Wonderful video
يا هلا فعلا وربي نفسي اوري مدرسي كيف يكون المدرس
ماشاءالله افهم منه ضعف من ما افهم من مدرس الابله
thx a lot......U explained very perfectly
What I would like to know is in that NaCl crystal, what inter molecular force occurs? Is it also a dipole-dipole force? Ionic bonds like NaCl is poler right? I mean there is a very strong positive side and a very strong negative side.
I really hope you willl soon upload vids about organic chemistry!
Hydrogen Bonding occurs only between Hydrogen and: Oxygen, Fluorine, or Nitrogen. These three elements are highly electronegative forming strong bonds with Hydrogen.
Thanks it was very helpful
u saved my life !!!!!
thank you so much!
thank you so much
Thanks. I learned some stuff my book could explain to me.
Thanks a lot.
I love this dude
Is a dipole-induced dipole force the same as a London Dispersion force? I know that instantaneous dipole-induced dipole forces are the same as London forces, but idk about dipole-induced dipole
Dipole-induced dipole is the Debye forces. London dispersion forces are between non-polar molecules (like between two oxygen molecules) and are very short-lived.
Thank you.
Helpful.
Very very useful interesting and nice
감사합니다`~~
you help me thru my first year of chemistry not my prof. thanks.
im in same class
#your #awesome bro
Thank you
Yep it was interesting n helpful
holy fuck awesome pacing and use of visual aides, 10/10, you just explained the shit out of this.
ok so whats the difference between dipole forces and london forces?
is there a difference between a polar molecule and a dipole?
Thanks sir!
Helpful
Thanku sir ur really amazing.................
Sir is this force similar to London dispersion force?
very nice. will u plz answer me? why HCl molecules have no hydrogen bonding
Rahat Ali For Hydrogen bonding to occur, a hydrogen of a molecule must be bonded to a very electronegative atom of another molecule (F O N /Fluorine Oxygen Nitrogen)
Thanks ;)
at 3:33 if you look at the diagram and then away the diagram will appear to get bigger
0:41 So you mean another word for polar molecule is a dipole?
That's how I studdy for chemistry exams xD
Trying to find out how permanent dipoles are formed. Been stuck for a hour. Still stuck.
So gooodddd👏👏💝👏💝👏💝
Great
Which Chemistry course level is this
seriously... i wish i could give u 1000 likes
cute
Gratitudes
Why does oxygen have 2 delta negatives in water while its only one atom?
Good
what about indip-indip