Is Every Reaction Actually Reversible?

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  • Опубликовано: 2 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 459

  • @TheActionLab
    @TheActionLab  2 года назад +588

    Also remember that just because a reaction is reversible doesn't mean that it will happen spontaneously. Spontaneous reactions only happen if they have a negative Gibbs energy. Being reversible or spontaneous aren't really related to each other. For example, H2 can burn with O2 to form water. But if you start out with room temperature H2O, it will not spontaneously form H2 and O2 because it doesn't have enough energy. But if you get the H2O hot enough providing enough energy some of the H2O will split back into H2 and O2 and form an equilibrium with water because H2+0.5O2=H2O is a reversible reaction. That is why you don't see things spontaneously "unburn." The "unburning" is endothermic and requires energy.

    • @satriahanifrofi9798
      @satriahanifrofi9798 2 года назад +3

      Anjay

    • @vipranshmishra7472
      @vipranshmishra7472 2 года назад

      chemical and ionic equlibrium

    • @BruhGamer05
      @BruhGamer05 2 года назад +14

      Fun fact
      Never gonna give you up
      Never gonna let you down

    • @banz3949
      @banz3949 2 года назад +3

      I just love you videos n you sir❤️ you are my one of most favourite RUclipsr

    • @MechanicalengineeringBtech
      @MechanicalengineeringBtech 2 года назад +6

      When I go down stairs by using my energy. Can I reverse the process by going back up the stairs by gaining energy? I think we can't reverse the process on the same path.

  • @TheArcV
    @TheArcV 2 года назад +220

    Great video! But I felt that the thumbnail is a bit misleading since you are ignoring the composite organizational structure. So unburning ashes and getting a sheet of paper back is going to be nearly impossible. Sure, ashes could be separated and you might be able to reverse them from CO2, H2O, and trace minerals into hydrocarbon chains and maybe ever something like cellulose chains with a lot of effort and energy. But converting that into paper fibers and then milling that into paper sheets is not a chemical thing.

    • @abrumm87
      @abrumm87 2 года назад +19

      I think he addressed this in his pinned comment discussing spontaneity and Gibbs. This brings in the entropic component as you mention. This discussion likely deserves a whole separate video and would be too much here. Cheers

    • @Kirkaig
      @Kirkaig 2 года назад +3

      I think what he meant was that it is technically possible, but not easy

    • @mariadefatimajesusdorea3141
      @mariadefatimajesusdorea3141 Год назад

      MA

    • @mariadefatimajesusdorea3141
      @mariadefatimajesusdorea3141 Год назад

      T

  • @Khether0001
    @Khether0001 2 года назад +249

    That thumbnail was a little click-baity, you don't need that, your channel is *AMAZING!*
    I've always loved science my entire life and I still learn something new on EVERY video you release! Thank you so, so much for sharing all this!!!

    • @zecuse
      @zecuse 2 года назад +5

      Change the paper to ethanol and it's the same thing as shown towards then end of the video.

    • @desmondyung
      @desmondyung 2 года назад +2

      He actually talked about combustion in the video tho

    • @tcphll
      @tcphll 2 года назад +15

      @@desmondyung Sure. But the thumbnail implied reversing the burning of paper specifically.

    • @wamlartmuse2983
      @wamlartmuse2983 2 года назад

      Agreed lol.

    • @ac-130fan
      @ac-130fan 2 года назад +3

      Did you also believe that the thumbnail of him floating after putting helium in his shoes was real? Or that he actually time traveled in his other video? Like really, dude.

  • @blazbohinc4964
    @blazbohinc4964 2 года назад +97

    To answer the question : some reactions are incredibly innefficient to reverse. And if the efficiency is low enough, we call them irreversible.

    • @monki6304
      @monki6304 2 года назад +4

      But they’re technically reversible? It would just take a lot of effort right

    • @adityaagarwal636
      @adityaagarwal636 Год назад +1

      @@monki6304 Right. A lot of energy, temperature, and perhaps a lot of pressure.

    • @albongo3949
      @albongo3949 Год назад

      Tesla would’ve known.

  • @BetaTestingUrGf
    @BetaTestingUrGf 2 года назад +28

    le chatelies priciple says, that the reaction will oppose the injection.
    You put in more reactants - the reaction makes more products.
    you put in more products, the reaction make reactants.
    you raise the temperature - the reaction lowers the temperature (endoterm reaction)
    you lower the temperatuer - the reaction raise the temperature (exoterm reaction)

    • @antonioamosanchez4912
      @antonioamosanchez4912 2 года назад +5

      In principle yes. But you added temperature which can be a but tricky. There are reactions that despite exothermic will never (for all practical purposes) occur if the temperature is not high enough, due to kinetic priciples (activation energy). Hydrogen combustion for example. You can mix both gases at room temperature an you will observe no combustion, much less in lower temperatures.

    • @DeepakKumar-gd1wg
      @DeepakKumar-gd1wg 2 года назад +3

      @@antonioamosanchez4912 i agree with you, energy and orientation barriers need to be overcome for a reaction to occur, but other than that his statement stands correct.

  • @M1551NGN0
    @M1551NGN0 2 года назад +38

    I always had this doubt in my chemistry classes that what could be the examples of reversible chemical changes. Finally solved in a unique manner, thank you very much sir!

  • @HelloKittyFanMan.
    @HelloKittyFanMan. 2 года назад +29

    Okay, so let's see you unburn some paper or other stuff then. That ought to be really interesting!

    • @TheActionLab
      @TheActionLab  2 года назад +5

      Unburning paper is done all the time. CO2 is turning back into cellulose in my back yard right now through photosynthesis. It just takes energy to do so. Just because you need to add energy back into the system doesn't make it irreversible. Also notice that just because the process is reversible doesn't mean the molecules are placed back in the same order they were before. So you can set up an equilibrium with cellulose and its gas products because it is a reversible reaction (pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlehtml/2018/gc/c8gc01092g). But the cellulose won't be arranged in the same order it was to begin with.

    • @digiminecraft
      @digiminecraft 2 года назад

      @@TheActionLab I feel like this should have been made clearer in the video. Because the reaction is not reversible. It's just that technically you can use the products and through other reactions, you can get your original starting material. Writing an equilibrium arrow to C6H12O6+O2 CO2+H2O wouldn't be correct, as no amount of energy in any form would reverse this reaction. You might run into problems with activation energy and/or reach an equilibrium but to reverse it you would need different reactions. eg. photosynthesis.

    • @TheActionLab
      @TheActionLab  2 года назад +2

      @@digiminecraft you said that no amount of energy in any form would reverse this reaction. However we know that isn't true because that is exactly what the overall reaction is in photosynthesis. CO2+H2O-> C6H12O6+O2. The reaction is absolutely reversible. It just isn't spontaneous in the case of combustion. However to make it spontaneous you need the complex workings of photosynthesis. The reaction is reversible, but you have to be clever in some cases to make it spontaneous.

    • @AelwynMr
      @AelwynMr 2 года назад +2

      @@digiminecraft I don't agree. Given enough CO2 and water, some molecules are bound to bump into each other by chance in precisely the right way to reconstitute the paper just as it was before. You 100% would need many more than there are in the universe, but that chance is never completely zero, unless you are at 0 K. That's why technically all reactions are reversible.

    • @HelloKittyFanMan.
      @HelloKittyFanMan. 2 года назад

      @@TheActionLab Thanks for your reply! But I meant in a way that isn't growing a new tree and then harvesting the wood to make paper again. Besides, that's not reforming the paper back from the ashes. I mean actually reversing the BURN.
      What about unburning plastic, rubber, oil, etc.? Forming food back from poop, etc.? (OK, I know you can't remake that same burger or pizza from it, but still, what could someone do?)
      I know GOD can do it when he has a good enough reason to. I think that's how the physical part of resurrection works, but it has to be really precise!

  • @TheAlfmister101
    @TheAlfmister101 2 года назад +8

    Technically, the equilibrium being referred to here is a dynamic equilibrium - since an equilibrium suggests that the amount of product and reactant is fixed at a given concentration

  • @chaddumas2499
    @chaddumas2499 2 года назад +2

    Holy crap, James. This episode is why I love watching your channel. This reminds me of why I embraced science so many years ago...it's fun and fascinating. Thank you for reminding me of this. You give an old man hope.

  • @westonding8953
    @westonding8953 2 года назад +21

    The implications of this are mind blowing! You could reverse every reaction! It’s just that some are not possible with the current state of the universe!

  • @mike1024.
    @mike1024. 2 года назад +7

    Before watching the video, I'm going to say that the answer to the question in the title is no. No reaction is truly reversible without introducing some sort of outside influence like energy, additional matter, etc., according to the second law of thermodynamics.
    Edit after watching: Great points! But you added something when you discussed reversing, so it sounds like we're talking about two different kinds of reversing. Interesting video though! I'd never heard of this concentration stuff in a reaction.

    • @staxstonecutter1802
      @staxstonecutter1802 2 года назад +3

      I don't think the title was meant to imply that you can magically reverse any reaction without having to do anything to it.

    • @mike1024.
      @mike1024. 2 года назад +1

      @@staxstonecutter1802 Agreed. It was a very interesting video overall!

    • @spiderdude2099
      @spiderdude2099 2 года назад +2

      Technically, you CAN a reverse any chemical reaction, it’s just that some reverse reactions take an INCREDIBLE amount of effort and energy to the point that it’s accurate to say it’s essentially irreversible.
      For example, you can burn paper to convert it to CO2 and water. If you were REALLY determined, you could convert CO2 and water into simple sugars (and yes, you technically can do this without needing a plant or photosynthesis it’s just ridiculously impractical). Then link those sugars in the right way to make cellulose, and then make the cellulose pulp into paper.

    • @mike1024.
      @mike1024. 2 года назад +2

      @@spiderdude2099 I was thinking about the picture to when I made my comment. I definitely agree it would take significant effort like that!

  • @austingisel521
    @austingisel521 2 года назад

    You both make prefect sense and make everything clear as mud all at the same time and that's why I've been watching your videos since you were a shredder/press channel

  • @Fuzzycap
    @Fuzzycap 2 года назад +28

    Last time I was this early youtube had a different icon!!!

  • @David-pp9jw
    @David-pp9jw 2 года назад +11

    Regarding both Le Chatelier's Principle and Freezing Point Depression, you've summarized 2 concepts in 6 some minutes where a semester of Gen Chem II covering the same could only be more misguided.
    Thank you much for keeping on the uphill for these videos-your content rocks!! 💛

    • @AelwynMr
      @AelwynMr 2 года назад +1

      I would argue that he did not explain things, though. Le Chatelier's principle works, but why does it work? Saying that molecules and systems "want" to do something is fine, as long as you only need a prediction, but it's not an explanation, which would require thinking about the chances of particles bumping into each other. It's a nice video anyway!

  • @dyonramselaar
    @dyonramselaar 2 года назад +5

    Did you forget to edit the section with the paper in, which is shown in the thumbnail?

  • @tekkno.logist
    @tekkno.logist 2 года назад +1

    Officially my favourite action lab video ever you are a true genius in the way you explain such complex and difficult to comprehend concept. I will be all of my students!

  • @MrBlaDiBla68
    @MrBlaDiBla68 2 года назад

    Okay, so by the tumbnail I was thinking (not believing) you were going to "un-burn" paper, but the explanation at the end answered that omission very nicely. Cheers!

  • @ayosiku2
    @ayosiku2 2 года назад

    Omg...best explanation of the equilibrium constant and freezing point depression.

  • @mariooraic8648
    @mariooraic8648 2 года назад +18

    When talking about melting of the ice maybe you should said that molar fraction, not concentration, of the water is lower and consequently chemical potential (chemical potential of the liquid is determined by the molar fraction of that liquid in a solution) is lower which will lower the melting point.
    But overall great video!

    • @shadowkille8r99
      @shadowkille8r99 2 года назад +3

      Frankly this phenomenon is just better explained using colligative properties but no one really cares about those

  • @vishalpatil-fy2ot
    @vishalpatil-fy2ot 2 года назад +5

    My teacher explained le Chatelier's principal but I didn't understand at time but this teacher explained very well.
    I love u r channel 💓.

  • @MrImcu
    @MrImcu 2 года назад

    so crystal clear, so brilliant video.

  • @TheAdvertisement
    @TheAdvertisement 2 года назад +1

    This is really trippy to think about, a reaction can be in this weird state of equilibrium.

  • @socrazybmx
    @socrazybmx 2 года назад +5

    awesome content!
    also, R.I.P. to your barber

  • @renatooliveira0266
    @renatooliveira0266 2 года назад

    That's an interesting approach!
    Nice!

  • @Ninja20704
    @Ninja20704 2 года назад

    Thanks for the very informative video. I was learning about chemical equilibriums of reversible reactions as well as equilibrium constants not too long ago. Your videos add on a lot of knowledge to what I already know. Thank you!

  • @RDJim
    @RDJim 2 года назад +4

    I just want to know what reaction is happening in your hair? Is that reversible? LOL - just kidding, great episode.

  • @drfroglegs
    @drfroglegs 2 года назад +11

    No. Enzymatic reactions? I guess you could have a different enzyme that catalyzes the reverse reaction, but I wouldn't consider that a truly reversible reaction.

    • @spiderdude2099
      @spiderdude2099 2 года назад +4

      That actually would classify as a reversible reaction if you had one enzyme catalyze the forwards reaction and a different one catalyze the reverse reaction.

    • @drfroglegs
      @drfroglegs 2 года назад

      @@spiderdude2099 agreed. But if you take Glucose reaction with glucose oxidase (and oxygen) it will form hydrogen peroxide and glucono lactone (iirc). Once that reaction has occurred I don't think there is any amount of adding product to the glucose oxidase that would force the reaction backwards for reform glucose.

    • @spiderdude2099
      @spiderdude2099 2 года назад +2

      @@drfroglegs only because the enzyme itself doesn’t function under the same equilibrium laws. For many enzymes, regardless of concentration they only perform one type of reaction and at a fixed rate. But that doesn’t mean that the rxn of turning glucose into glucolactone isn’t reversible. If you had a chemical method of making glucolactone, increasing the glucolactone concentration would cause the reverse reaction.
      In fact if you had a vat of glucose and threw in some enzyme and started converting it into hydrogen peroxide and glucolactone, eventually if you just kept making more and more of those products, they actually would start to react backwards. The enzyme wouldn’t be affecting that reaction, but just having a high concentration of glucolactone and hydrogen peroxide will transiently produce glucose if you just leave it there.

  • @marcovalentinuzzi5830
    @marcovalentinuzzi5830 2 года назад

    Thank you! Enlightening point of view. Fascinating.

  • @silvenshadow
    @silvenshadow 2 года назад

    This video was great. Excellent balance between challenging scientific concepts and real world understandability. Cheers!

  • @risaalmedia6592
    @risaalmedia6592 2 года назад +1

    I studied this in my 10 class😅😅.
    Chemical equilibrium is the stage at which the rate of the forward reaction becomes equal to the rate of the backward reaction in a reversible chemical reaction.
    *At the equilibrium both of the reactants and the products coexist.
    *The rate of forward and backward reaction become equal at equilibrium.
    *chemical equilibrium is dynamic in molecular level.
    *chemical equilibrium is attained in closed system.
    Le chateliers' principle
    When the concentration pressure or temperature of a system at equilibrium is changed the system will readjust itself so as to nullify the effect of that change and attain a new state of equilibrium.
    Oo i forget to tell about forward and backward reaction or reversible reaction.
    Reaction take place in both directions are called reversible reaction.
    In reversible reaction the reaction in which the reactants charge to products is called the forward reaction.
    In which products charge back to reactants is called the backward reaction. 😅😅

  • @rodericklenz5030
    @rodericklenz5030 2 года назад

    Your hair in this video is one of the things that makes your channel the most sciencey science channel on RUclips.

  • @johnfox9169
    @johnfox9169 2 года назад

    You cleared up some confusion about this. Thanks.

  • @matteodekrinis1222
    @matteodekrinis1222 2 года назад +8

    Thanks for the interesting content!!! You always make my day! :)

  • @poggodoggo77
    @poggodoggo77 2 года назад +1

    This guy is basically science translator.

  • @Darian29Ewers
    @Darian29Ewers 2 года назад

    I love this channel so much

  • @NM-pi6ve
    @NM-pi6ve 2 года назад +2

    Nice trick, but I would really love to see you unburn some paper as your preview picture indicated might be possible and and which you say most certainly is possible.I really like your videos :)

  • @junyunolife3824
    @junyunolife3824 2 года назад

    I was just learning about this last week

  • @EntropiaBones
    @EntropiaBones 2 года назад

    Not sure you read these comments after some point , but ty for sharing your knowledge. Some teachers are better than others reaching laymen such as myself.

  • @pierelenigus8598
    @pierelenigus8598 2 года назад

    This one was a good one. Lots of useful tidbits of knowledge.

  • @ltstheprogamer
    @ltstheprogamer 2 года назад +2

    What how is that possible!!!
    .
    .
    .
    Watching after 58 seconds of uploading!!!

  • @DiegoMartinez-se8js
    @DiegoMartinez-se8js 2 года назад

    Great video. Le Chatelier's principle is seemingly simple but it often puzzling in its consequences

  • @Piccolo_Sun
    @Piccolo_Sun 2 года назад

    Good stuff my brother important understanding

  • @RocketsNRovers
    @RocketsNRovers 2 года назад

    This explaination literally helped my in the chapter chemical equilibrim of my grade 11 curriculum alot ,, thx alot (made the theory live and now i want to learn more ) :D

  • @nightstorm9872
    @nightstorm9872 2 года назад +4

    Why does the thumbnail have nothing to do with this video?

  • @technicalunsupport
    @technicalunsupport 2 года назад +6

    Literally learned this a few weeks ago, grade 12 chem is wild

    • @cheesebun3461
      @cheesebun3461 2 года назад +1

      unfortunately our teacher sucked
      that's y i kinda hated the subject

  • @falnesioghander6929
    @falnesioghander6929 2 года назад

    That is why salt works?! That is amazing! Dynamic equilibrium is blowing my mind!

  • @dominicwalker1899
    @dominicwalker1899 2 года назад

    You could make a chemistry specific channel - you explained this so well

  • @PTGaonkar
    @PTGaonkar 2 года назад +8

    I never miss his videos. love them. I learn new thin every single video

  • @BiasOfficialChannel
    @BiasOfficialChannel 2 года назад +1

    Him: «So maybee you are thinking that adding more iron would bla bla………
    My brain: 😐
    Randome chair:🪑

  • @FASTFASTmusic
    @FASTFASTmusic 2 года назад +6

    So interesting! Thank you for all your amazing videos

  • @raychat2816
    @raychat2816 2 года назад

    I was almost waiting for some way to mess with entropy 😂😂😂

  • @Sourevv
    @Sourevv 2 года назад +1

    0:27 nah I didn't assume that. 😂

    • @TheActionLab
      @TheActionLab  2 года назад +1

      You know what happens when we assume...

    • @Sourevv
      @Sourevv 2 года назад

      @@TheActionLab 🤣 pun intended

  • @TheBooker66
    @TheBooker66 2 года назад +1

    I was sure you were going to talk about the law in quantum mechanics which states that no information is ever lost and maybe even the information paradox, mostly because of the thumbnail. Still a great video though!

  • @Melki
    @Melki 2 года назад

    THANK YOU for this revelation / insight :)

    • @TheActionLab
      @TheActionLab  2 года назад +1

      Thanks for being a channel member!

    • @Melki
      @Melki 2 года назад

      @@TheActionLab You're Welcome!

  • @JoeJ-8282
    @JoeJ-8282 2 года назад +2

    So how would a piece of burnt paper ever become "unburned", as you showed in the thumbnail? (or was that just "clickbait"?)(I thought you were gonna somehow show that reversal)

  • @simon2493
    @simon2493 2 года назад

    It reminds me of years spent learning chemistry as main subject in high school

  • @planetpeterson2824
    @planetpeterson2824 2 года назад

    My understanding of freezing point depression is that the polar water molecules stick to the salt ions, therefore it takes more energy to get them to crystallize because you have to remove the intermolecular force between them and the ions, which is why it freezes at a lower temperature. Is this video claiming otherwise or is it just explaining it in a different way?

    • @westonding8953
      @westonding8953 2 года назад

      They are related. It’s probably one of those things where it’s the same explanation using different concepts but ultimately is one phenomenon.

  • @gravypuk
    @gravypuk 2 года назад

    I see your t-shirt. Makes me wonder about chemistry and equilibrium of muscles in a long run...

  • @AbrahimSabir
    @AbrahimSabir 2 года назад +2

    used to be my favorite principle during high school.. since it represented much more than just describe a chemical equilibrium... I saw it as applicable on many more things (like larger society etc)
    thanks for reminding me of this again 🙏

  • @Raphaelpoh
    @Raphaelpoh 2 года назад

    Omg thanks for explaining! I just had a lesson on this lol

  • @SwitchVideos64
    @SwitchVideos64 2 года назад

    Yo bro. You should consider position in your reasoning. Comparing reversible and spontaneous is only necessary to explain a side effect of time. 1) Time is where things used to be being. 2) Two masses can’t occupy the same space at the same time. 3) No indivisible mass can occupy the same space for a duration longer than an indivisible unit of time.
    In summary. Time moves forward because it is how we describe what being is doing.

  • @toxiczone2016
    @toxiczone2016 2 года назад +1

    That's really cool

  • @sylphsylph2118
    @sylphsylph2118 2 года назад

    so thats why when using a tiny amount of -40 windshield washer in a driveway it clears it fully out in about 2 hours without help and with more it feels slushy instead..... yet its more effective to use a very small amount that screw the ice in the driveway more effectively

  • @azizhakim7337
    @azizhakim7337 2 года назад +3

    You're the best science teacher on RUclips

  • @prosamis
    @prosamis 2 года назад +8

    We should also consider the second law of thermodynamics in things like this
    If you let a metal object dissolve in acid then add a ton of product to reverse the reaction, the metal object won't reform the way it was before due to entropy

    • @nothingnothing1799
      @nothingnothing1799 2 года назад +6

      What your describing isn't entropy

    • @prosamis
      @prosamis 2 года назад

      @@nothingnothing1799 you can look at it from an entropy perspective
      Something coming back to its original form like that is order, much more orderly than simply forming metal chunks, and order like that is of decreasing entropy, thus impossible to occur by virtue of the second law of thermo without outside influence

    • @nothingnothing1799
      @nothingnothing1799 2 года назад +6

      @@prosamis entropy has to do with a decrease in usable energy, a different arrangement of atoms does not decrease usable energy.
      Chaos != Entropy

    • @prosamis
      @prosamis 2 года назад

      @@nothingnothing1799 to get atoms in a certain, specific arrangement, that does take energy, thus it happening spontaneously would decrease usable energy

    • @nothingnothing1799
      @nothingnothing1799 2 года назад +6

      @@prosamis any difference in energy would come down to temperature as energy would be required to pull the metal out of the acid the only entropy in the entire system would be the overall cooling of the solution, the order of atoms itself wouldn't be affected, therefore entropy has no effect on the reaction as stated.
      You are unequivocally incorrect.

  • @newt7743
    @newt7743 2 года назад +2

    Love your videos dude your channel is awesome and I haven't seen much content like it. Keep up the great work

  • @amberwarrior459
    @amberwarrior459 2 года назад +1

    OK, now turn toast into bread

  • @ReiDaTecnologia
    @ReiDaTecnologia 2 года назад

    Two things the universe loves; RNG and balance.

  • @lucasgerosa4177
    @lucasgerosa4177 2 года назад +1

    So this is why water extinguishes fire 🤯

    • @anhondacivic6541
      @anhondacivic6541 2 года назад

      Water extinguishes a fire because it is taking away the thermal energy from the fire which stops the fire from being a self sustaining reaction

  • @heinzaballoo3278
    @heinzaballoo3278 2 года назад +1

    Holy shit! Mind = Blown 💥

  • @yoyojomoipo8479
    @yoyojomoipo8479 2 года назад

    thank you science teacher

  • @VladimirMiyazaki
    @VladimirMiyazaki 2 года назад

    I wish this video was uploaded in 2160p 60fps

  • @tennessine5928
    @tennessine5928 2 года назад +1

    Explain the Galileo experiment which is in Iron Man and put it in the vacuum chamber

  • @murisio
    @murisio 2 года назад +4

    but doesnt entropy play an important role too? in thermodynamics we learnt that explosions are irreversible due to its huge entropic factor

  • @PTGaonkar
    @PTGaonkar 2 года назад +2

    You explained it simply. I never understood that in school.amazing theorem

  • @abyssherald9874
    @abyssherald9874 2 года назад

    this video is a pure science class 🗿

  • @ananyagoel7591
    @ananyagoel7591 2 года назад +1

    That hairstyle tho

  • @galladegamerletsplays
    @galladegamerletsplays 2 года назад

    I gotta admit, I thought the title said "is every reaction possible" and my dumbass was over here thinking "ON ONE PIECE OF PAPER?"

  • @cristhianalonsobatistacast1114
    @cristhianalonsobatistacast1114 2 года назад

    This blew my mind

  • @sajgol14
    @sajgol14 2 года назад

    Cool. What would you suggest instead of salt to melt ice on roads?

  • @TheAdvertisement
    @TheAdvertisement 2 года назад +1

    I don't think I've ever heard the term "iron drops" before.

  • @wolfmanoh
    @wolfmanoh 2 года назад +1

    Okay. So how much " *insert required material* " would I need to reverse the burning a standard sheet of printing paper?

  • @itselevenfiftyfive3833
    @itselevenfiftyfive3833 2 года назад

    You should do a video on superfluids, liquids that have essentially no viscosity!

  • @risaalmedia6592
    @risaalmedia6592 2 года назад +1

    Can you please create a video about (IUPAC)naming.

  • @vaanivijay6552
    @vaanivijay6552 2 года назад

    Now I understand why impurities reduce the melting point of solids!

  • @wellesmorgado4797
    @wellesmorgado4797 2 года назад +1

    There is microscopic reversibility, which might be inherent in the microscopic dynamics of the system, and macroscopic reversibility, which is a different animal altogether. Macroscopic transformations in out-of-equilibrium systems involve entropic penalties, which can be very high, thus making certain reverse processes very improbable. The easiest example is that of an ideal gas, constituted by N >> 1 molecules, in the left half of an ideal box. If one removes the partition, the gas expands to the whole box. Will the gas return to the left half spontaneously? Most likely not, since the probability of N molecules going spontaneously back to the original half is basically 1/2 to the power N, which is something like 1/10^{10^{23}}, or smaller.

  • @RomanoPRODUCTION
    @RomanoPRODUCTION 2 года назад

    Today, James makes his great video at 3 am. Yeah!

  • @humagator4049
    @humagator4049 2 года назад

    He is the type of guy who answers questions like is infinite bouncing possible

  • @邵奕虹
    @邵奕虹 2 года назад +4

    what happened in your hair?!

  • @ZaheerSubratty779
    @ZaheerSubratty779 2 года назад

    This is what the mother boxes do in Justice league

  • @SolarSeeker45
    @SolarSeeker45 2 года назад +2

    That works with simple chemistry, but when you get to organic chemistry reactions can be irreversible since complex molecules aren't going to magically reassemble themselves.

    • @AnEnderNon
      @AnEnderNon 2 года назад

      you could reassemble them with some process though, wouldnt that make it reversible

  • @peterxyz3541
    @peterxyz3541 2 года назад

    Fascinating. 👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼. Side question, how would you approach a diy liquid flow battery? If you can teach this, you’ll be immortalise as the saviour of modern time. Maybe you will be the one who jump start Type 1 civilisation.

  • @balaam_7087
    @balaam_7087 2 года назад

    Ah, the mystery of the red dot on the cashmere sweater slowly comes into focus…

  • @sirpentineplays5560
    @sirpentineplays5560 2 года назад

    bro mr muller(my awesome chem teacher) couldn't teach me this in 2 years, ily dude

    • @AelwynMr
      @AelwynMr 2 года назад

      Not very awesome then, was he? 😆

  • @komplettegal
    @komplettegal 2 года назад

    My Head went like Boom!

  • @hammockcamping2500
    @hammockcamping2500 2 года назад

    @ ActionLab. Have you seen the high-tech paints and reflective materials that radiate heat out to space and can be cooler than the ambient temperature even in the sunshine?
    Would you do a science investigation of this phenomenon? Could you make a shed that gets its cooling from a radiative cooling system? Perhaps radiative panels could be on the north roof and photovoltaic on the south. The shed could have an insulated 55 gallon drum of water to store chilled water.
    Alternatively...
    Would you do a science investigation or review of magnetic water treatment systems? A side-by side-test of a control vs treatment test for calcium deposits would be awesome. Also could you discuss the science or pseudo science of the claims made by advocates of magnetic treatment systems? My family bought a magnet for $400 in the mid 90s to treat the incoming water. It was being promoted by a multi-level marketing scheme. I've been skeptical, and would love to see a critical investigation. Could you do a collaboration with one or more of the following?: (Project Farm, Cody's Lab, Practical Engineering, Smarter Every Day, Mark Rober, Nate From the Internet, TheBackyardScientist, SmarterEveryDay, NighthawklinLight). Project Farm is really good about testing products' claims. Cody is brilliant and creative in a science and hands-on way. Actually any of you could do a great collaboration. Also, if the claims made by the water treatment folks are false, please humiliate them publicly.

  • @Eliotah
    @Eliotah 2 года назад +2

    Amazing video action lab

  • @samtaylor5699
    @samtaylor5699 2 года назад

    For a split second at the end, I thought he said "... the REACTION lab" which would have been fitting for this video

  • @Boy-cm8ec
    @Boy-cm8ec 2 года назад

    One of my favorite chemistry theory. =D

  • @neranjantc2665
    @neranjantc2665 2 года назад

    Omg!!! I was studying the same reaction on my grade 12 book