Hi, so I understand water gets ignored because its a liquid and its the solvent, so its not technically in concentration with anything (unless like concentration within itself which would make it 1 so its still ignored). But at the same time, aren't there h3o+ and Oh- within the water that shouldn't be ignored, but added to the acid that got added to the water?
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U explained very well, thank you
Best video so far
At 1:54 the reaction is actually proceeding to the right, not left.
You're a beast, thanks for teaching it so quick.
Thank you so much helped me a lot!
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Thank you! Great explanation
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7 minutes for 1 problem! Fun!
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why you just missed out the original concentration 10^-7 H+ ions per liter in pure water?
What does x refer to?
Why two x's and not just one since you only loose one hydrogen?
Omg slay
Hi, so I understand water gets ignored because its a liquid and its the solvent, so its not technically in concentration with anything (unless like concentration within itself which would make it 1 so its still ignored). But at the same time, aren't there h3o+ and Oh- within the water that shouldn't be ignored, but added to the acid that got added to the water?
added to the H+ the acid added to the water^
bro FUCK this shit so confusing thanks though