Ytterbium - Periodic Table of Videos

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  • Опубликовано: 6 окт 2024
  • A new video about the element Ytterbium.
    More links and info in full description ↓↓↓
    Videos on all 118 elements: bit.ly/118elements
    With thanks to the Fondation H. Dudley Wright - www.hdwright.org
    And our thanks to Anthony Lipmann for the piece of Ytterbium.
    Video from Ytterby: • Ytterby Mine (source o...
    Support us on Patreon: / periodicvideos
    More chemistry at www.periodicvid...
    Follow us on Facebook at / periodicvideos
    And on Twitter at / periodicvideos
    From the School of Chemistry at The University of Nottingham: bit.ly/NottChem
    This episode was also generously supported by The Gatsby Charitable Foundation
    Periodic Videos films are by video journalist Brady Haran: www.bradyharan....
    Brady's Blog: www.bradyharanb...
    Join Brady's mailing list for updates and extra stuff --- eepurl.com/YdjL9

Комментарии • 310

  • @jippijip101
    @jippijip101 Год назад +253

    I study ytterbium for my PhD! It’s a great element and quite important in quantum computing

  • @sonderanderson1312
    @sonderanderson1312 Год назад +437

    Neil sniffing the ammonium hydroxide to check if it’s still alright to use is the most Neil thing to do 🤣🤣🤣

    • @MicraHakkinen
      @MicraHakkinen Год назад +23

      That's how a coworker landed himself in the hospital. We were clearing out some old bottles from a seldomky used workshop and came across a large brown glass bottle. Instead of carefully smelling the cap, he proceeded to forcefully inhale with his nose right up to the bottle: it contained ammonia.

    • @Kycilak
      @Kycilak Год назад +5

      @@MicraHakkinen My colleague once wanted to flush ammonia solution from a burette after a titration with is breath. Well... One has to breath in before one can breath out and he inhaled with the burette already at his lips. Thankfully it had no effect on his health.
      Don't blow into burettes, wait just a little for the reagent to trickle out itself.

    • @kenmohler4081
      @kenmohler4081 Год назад +15

      @@Kycilak This only slightly related, but you made me remember an event from my long past. I was a little kid getting his tonsils out and they were using ether as the anesthetic. I told you it was a long time ago. I was struggling with the mask so the anesthesiologist said, “Don’t you like that smell? Just blow it away as hard as you can.” I did. What is the next thing you do after you have blown all the air out of your lungs? Right.

    • @darwinenthusiast3039
      @darwinenthusiast3039 Год назад +4

      As a fellow Neil, I can confirm I would do the same.

    • @brandonwinstead7137
      @brandonwinstead7137 Год назад +4

      That Hauksbee Medal didn't earn itself

  • @sammarks9146
    @sammarks9146 Год назад +20

    Ytterbium has a special place in my heart - I did a report on it in high school (20+ years ago), because it was the 'most random' element I could think of. I had no idea it could be so lively!

  • @snehankekre8747
    @snehankekre8747 Год назад +77

    I'm so grateful these videos will be accessible to all future generations. Truly a service for humanity

    • @VeganSemihCyprus33
      @VeganSemihCyprus33 Год назад

      If you solve this problem you can be a billionaire 👉The Connections (2021) [short documentary]💖

  • @deoxyplasmic
    @deoxyplasmic Год назад +80

    You're like a Carl Sagan of Chemistry. You seem so down to earth, but your excitement for chemistry and the way you present your exploration makes me excited to learn about chemistry, and explore it with you.

    • @VeganSemihCyprus33
      @VeganSemihCyprus33 Год назад

      If you solve this problem you can be a billionaire 👉The Connections (2021) [short documentary]💖

  • @Trench777
    @Trench777 Год назад +58

    I'm SO grateful to see Sir Martyn looks healthy and still going strong. He is a treasure and I hope for him to enjoy many, many more years.

    • @xl000
      @xl000 Год назад +1

      he is just 75 years old.
      That's not close to end of life in the UK.
      It's 80 years for men, 84 for women, but it's an average. Ther is a death peak however at age 87.

  • @PsRohrbaugh
    @PsRohrbaugh Год назад +34

    I could listen to the Professor talk for hours. Every video is a blessing!

    • @VeganSemihCyprus33
      @VeganSemihCyprus33 Год назад

      If you solve this problem you can be a billionaire 👉The Connections (2021) [short documentary]💖

  • @STEVE_C_1369
    @STEVE_C_1369 Год назад +102

    Whats great about ytterbium is its gaining use in semiconductor arena. Its also being used to replace other,very toxic substances,while its self,is very low in toxicity.

    • @VeganSemihCyprus33
      @VeganSemihCyprus33 Год назад

      If you solve this problem you can be a billionaire 👉The Connections (2021) [short documentary]💖

    • @STEVE_C_1369
      @STEVE_C_1369 Год назад

      @@VeganSemihCyprus33 🖕

  • @xifel72
    @xifel72 Год назад +113

    Ytterby can be translated to Outer Village. "Ytter" = Outer. "By" = Village

    • @Olhado256
      @Olhado256 Год назад +20

      So the element is really Outervillageium!

    • @alexpotts6520
      @alexpotts6520 Год назад +20

      It's interesting, the "-by" suffix seems to have crossed the North Sea (possibly with the Vikings?) and appears in the names of British places too: Derby, Grimsby, Whitby, Rugby etc.
      In fact two of those four are towns on the east coast of Britain, which makes the Viking theory even more plausible.

    • @beeble2003
      @beeble2003 Год назад +3

      @@alexpotts6520 I'm not sure why you describe it as a theory -- it's a well-established fact.

    • @pattheplanter
      @pattheplanter Год назад

      There is an Utterby in Lincolnshire, though the Oxford Dictionary of Place-names explains it as "Utterby Lincs. Uthterby 1150-60. Probably ‘farmstead or village of a man called Ūhtrēd or Ūhthere’."
      They do have:
      Idrigill Highland.
      (Skye). ‘Outer gully’. OScand. ytri + gil.
      But they think the ytri in Itteringham Norfolk was a person.
      Utrincham 1086 (db). Probably ‘homestead of the family or followers of a man called *Ytra or *Ytri’. OE pers. name + -inga- + hām.

    • @gwen6622
      @gwen6622 Год назад +4

      outervillagium, and the other elements outrium, villagium, and lagium (which is basically how ytterbium, yttrium, terbium, and erbium are named lol)

  • @PeteSmithPhD
    @PeteSmithPhD Год назад +17

    Ytterbium has a quasi-stable +2 oxidation state that can persist in water in the presence of a strong reducing agent like ytterbium metal. The Yb(II) ion is light green in aqueous solution. I think that is why the solution was light green when you were showing the metal dissolving in hydrochloric acid. The Yb(III) was being reduced by the Yb(s) to form Yb(II).

    • @brainandforce
      @brainandforce Год назад +3

      With the right acid, you can make it persist for longer (I've found sulfamic acid does a decent job at stabilizing Yb(II) ions for long periods of time)

  • @kidmohair8151
    @kidmohair8151 Год назад +15

    you folks are continuing to have fun while providing education for the rest of us. thanks y'all!

  • @connieembury1
    @connieembury1 Год назад +12

    What a delightful surprise! First thing this morning a new Periodic video! I've been binge watching the periodic videos and just passed Ytterbium the day before. Thank you Professor, Neil and Brady for a lovely start to the day.

  • @chilou23
    @chilou23 Год назад +29

    Merci au professeur et son équipe!
    J’ai bien aimé l’entendre parler français.
    Longue vie à lui.

    • @patrickmarmorat1126
      @patrickmarmorat1126 Год назад +3

      Moi aussi et je le trouve très sympathique ! et toujours la cravate avec le tableau périodique !,

  • @Jeffrey_Tyler
    @Jeffrey_Tyler Год назад +7

    The professor is a national treasure. A WORLD treasure even. A treasure of humanity. I don't know if he has one of those educational knighthood medals from the Queen but he really deserves one ❤

    • @thekaxmax
      @thekaxmax Год назад +1

      He does have that knighthood, he did a video on it. ;)

    • @ferretyluv
      @ferretyluv Год назад

      He does

  • @mikestewart4752
    @mikestewart4752 Год назад +4

    Whatever I’m watching, I immediately drop it to watch these videos when one is released. Thanks Grady, and thanks Professor!!! ☮️ & ❤ from 🇨🇦

  • @coldloyalty
    @coldloyalty Год назад +7

    Its sad that people my age.. my peers see this, and feel bored.. i personally would give my toe to study chemistry in this way.. i find it incredible that you provide this knowledge to youtube.. Godspeed

  • @mrbullseye
    @mrbullseye Год назад +2

    Erbium, Terbium, Yttrium, Ytterbium and if I'm not mistaken, Scandium (?), maybe also Holmium (even bigger ?), were all found in this mine. Quite cool but of course the isolation of them and their discoveries go out to the amazing chemists from all over the world who put in the hours.

  • @plextoob
    @plextoob Год назад +16

    In my experience with colour from combustion, heat can destroy the ions needed to get strong colour. We'd often mix in a buffer to try and reduce the reaction temp to extract more colour. Perhaps the PTFE does the same - the PTFE burns first in the flame and provides a cooling effect to preserve the ions responsible for the colour?

  • @turpialito
    @turpialito Год назад +5

    Great to see the Professor again. Thanks, Brady. Your channels are veritable gems!

  • @vasoconvict
    @vasoconvict Год назад +11

    You guys are somehow still pumping out these videos after a solid 10+ years, and remaking them! Pretty cool.

  • @stefanhurtig7956
    @stefanhurtig7956 Год назад +20

    Many metals need a halogen donor to really bring out the flame color; in pyrotechnics, chlorine is usually used, though fluorine can also be found in some compositions. The exact compounds that form or the mechanism by which they enhance the color is to my knowledge little understood. It may be due to "forbidden" molecules that can only exist temporarily within the extreme conditions of the flame due to excitation or ionization. Maybe you guys could make a video about it.

    • @pattheplanter
      @pattheplanter Год назад

      I assumed the halogens just made the element more volatile by forming halides, so more entered the flame to get excited. The lumps of metal mostly combust with such a bright spark that they drown out the colour of the few ions that escape into the flame. Flame tests usually use ionic compounds of the metals rather than the elemental metals.

  • @wootman3125
    @wootman3125 Год назад +1

    its always amazing to me when you hear about chemist in history before all the modern microscopes and testing methods , accurately guessing the atomic mass size etc etc. and being only off by a few numbers, shows how talented and smart they really were

  • @bedlaskybedla6361
    @bedlaskybedla6361 Год назад +3

    Very nice experiments! I especially like Yb+PTFE green sparks, ytterbium chromate and unstable yellow Yb2+, which is formed during dissolving ytterbium in HCl (but it is quickly oxidized by oxygen and water to colourless Yb3+).

  • @ZoonCrypticon
    @ZoonCrypticon Год назад +3

    One of the best professors I know of! I would like to study chemistry in Nottingham under his supervision.

  • @davidgillies620
    @davidgillies620 Год назад +9

    I don't know if PTFE is used in fireworks but I do know it is used in certain types of anti-missile decoy flares for military aircraft, as when combined with a metal powder such as magnesium it generates a lot of infrared.

  • @parksto
    @parksto 5 месяцев назад

    Sir Poliakoff always succeed to make me smile.
    In his mouth, every story is wonder

  • @radders261
    @radders261 Год назад +2

    I'm always super chuffed when a new video pops up!

  • @rayoflight62
    @rayoflight62 Год назад +1

    It is always a pleasure to watch the Periodic videos!
    Thank you Professor and team for this video essay on ytterbium.
    Greetings,
    Anthony

  • @Bloated_Tony_Danza
    @Bloated_Tony_Danza Год назад +1

    I once rolled ytterbium into foil, and once alloyed ytterbium with bismuth. It's a very easy metal to shape and form, doesn't corrode as fast as other lanthanides too. I like ytterbium

  • @Trav3l3r69.
    @Trav3l3r69. 3 месяца назад

    I recently did a school project where I studied the elements that were discovered in Ytterby, or at least could trace their discovery back to the mine there and this was one of the elements I did.

  • @toine512fr
    @toine512fr Год назад +1

    I love it when the Professor and Neil are surprised!

  • @richross4781
    @richross4781 Год назад +3

    Been waiting for a different video. Thanks folks.

  • @theponk1
    @theponk1 Год назад +1

    Dear Sir
    I rank you as one of the worlds greatest educators.
    It’s a toss up for first place between you and Johnny ball but you’ve got the ‘fro dude😂
    Big love

  • @Physicus9
    @Physicus9 Год назад +1

    Hey! I like that Pyraminx you have on the desk (bottom right corner when the camera is on the Professor)

  • @calderarecords
    @calderarecords Год назад

    Your point at 11:06 really resonated with me on a profound level, Professor. 😔
    *"The true mark of a Scientist is having no allegiances to any one nation or doctrine, but to the earth and all the lifeforms on it. This is a Scientist - to me"* _Jacque Fresco, 1916-2017, Founder of the proposed Global Systems Approach, The Venus Project, Resource-Based Economy_

  • @38bass
    @38bass Год назад +1

    Thanks for another exciting video. 😊
    The music at the end was quite beautiful. ❤

  • @vinkuu
    @vinkuu Год назад +1

    Neil seems to be a super villain level authority on what to do and not do in the lab. I like him. Maybe tell us more about his background?

  • @ezekielbrockmann114
    @ezekielbrockmann114 Год назад

    It's so cool y'all still making these videos, really.
    Thank you!

  • @REXOB9
    @REXOB9 Год назад

    I measured isotope shifts in Ytterbium (and Dysprosium and Erbium) in my professor's lab many years ago.

  • @wjodf8067
    @wjodf8067 Год назад

    Happy day when a new video pops up from THE Professor and his merry band of assistants Thank you for all the hard work filing the metal Neil

  • @peterdefrankrijker
    @peterdefrankrijker 2 месяца назад

    Everytime I see a video in this series, I enjoy Martyn and Neil faffing about in their lab, talking about “a very nice cloudy white precipitate.” Makes me feel like a 13 year-old in high school chemistry class again.

  • @ShadowPuppet3001
    @ShadowPuppet3001 Год назад +1

    great video, I like the periodic table and the science stuff behind it 👍 😊🎉

  • @amundbjerve
    @amundbjerve Год назад

    I studied Ytterbium (among other elements/isotopes) during my master's degree (a degree called Cand. Scient. in Norway at the time). Not as a chemist, but as a nuclear physicist. (I have no knowledge about the chemical properties of this element).
    The nuclei of these rare earth elements have fairly evenly spaced energy levels. This means that the energy shells are not very pronounced, and by targeting the nuclei with light isotopes like 3He and 4He nuclei, one can excite the Yb nuclei and "heat" them up. It turns out that you get some sort of phase transitions in the nuclei. Since there are only 170-something particles in Yb, talking about temperatures may not be entirely correct (strictly speaking, you need infinitely many particles to have a temperature, but any macroscopic object will suffice). Apart from that, the temperatures (or "temperature-like" parameter if you like) in question are several billion degrees (if my memory is correct; this was back in the late 90s).

  • @DaHoodedBandit
    @DaHoodedBandit Год назад

    I love the professor, cherish him while we can

  • @williammorris1763
    @williammorris1763 Год назад

    Same idea behind ASML UV lithography using tin. 🔥 Great video! 🙌❤️

  • @luccablois1038
    @luccablois1038 Год назад +1

    Very Nice video, but I think that an awsome property of Ytterbium ions that is the capability of doing photon upconversion should be addressed, since it is a hot topic on the research of rare earth-based materials

  • @pystl
    @pystl Год назад

    Great video! Dr Poliakoff (and Neil, literally) was on 🔥!!

  • @bentationfunkiloglio
    @bentationfunkiloglio Год назад

    Always a pleasant surprise when a new video is released.

  • @amciuam157
    @amciuam157 Год назад

    Professor, your haircut is great. I wish to have so much knowledge in my head, to turn the hair; I still have, white colour like this. Ytterbium was also interesting.

  • @biaroca
    @biaroca Год назад

    I think the most iconic line from this channel is "I persuaded Neil"

  • @PopeLando
    @PopeLando Год назад +1

    Rejoice rejoice rejoice! A new Periodic Table of Videos element video!

  • @a64738
    @a64738 Год назад

    It is a great day every time there is a new "Periodic Table of Videos" ;)

  • @gabysuazo7942
    @gabysuazo7942 Год назад +1

    I love watching and hearing Professor Chaos.

  • @stud7463
    @stud7463 Год назад

    Wishing great health to our Professor.

  • @michaelwright2986
    @michaelwright2986 Год назад

    "really nice sparks and colours, and some quite nice salts as well." "Like it." (0:53)
    I really admire the detached scientific tone of this series.

  • @joshuahettinger9287
    @joshuahettinger9287 6 месяцев назад

    loved the anecdote about marignac's science dungeon

  • @Runner-Boy
    @Runner-Boy Год назад +1

    Cody'slab just dropped a video and bow you did crazy

  • @davillanueva1
    @davillanueva1 Год назад

    Hearing a professor say 'Jazz it up' made my day

  • @NAATHAAN
    @NAATHAAN Год назад

    Who ever makes a joke about this element deserves an Oscar and a Nobel Prize.

  • @Smart-Skippy
    @Smart-Skippy Год назад

    Thank you for making Chemistry interesting!

  • @stevengill1736
    @stevengill1736 Год назад

    You guys get the greatest element samples! Ah yes, PTFE pyrotechnics are used in various military formulations...
    But mischmetal filings work fine too...

  • @Thoran666
    @Thoran666 Год назад

    Interesting and a lot of fun to watch. Thanks for another great periodic table video.

  • @drrocketman7794
    @drrocketman7794 Год назад

    Omg that's wild! The colors are amazing!

  • @PackthatcameBack
    @PackthatcameBack Год назад

    "There is a single light of science, and to brighten it anywhere is to brighten it everywhere."

  • @jansenart0
    @jansenart0 Год назад +2

    All elements are exciting.

  • @RJRC_105
    @RJRC_105 Год назад +1

    "I persuaded Neil..."
    - the last think you hear before a large explosion.

  • @Haplo-san
    @Haplo-san Год назад +2

    I'm still curious how they precisely scaled atomic weights etc. 100-150 years ago.

  • @brainandforce
    @brainandforce Год назад +1

    If you want a really impressive demonstration with ytterbium and PTFE, wrap a generous amount of ytterbium powder in teflon tape. (Samarium also works for a pink flame, but ytterbium is the best of the lanthanides in terms of color and light output)

  • @jakedee4117
    @jakedee4117 Год назад +1

    Next you try alloying ytterbium with some other metals and measuring their mechanical properties for another video.

  • @charstringetje
    @charstringetje Год назад +1

    From flambéing pancakes with powdered sugar, in my experience it's most spectacular if you use fine powder and a tea sieve above the flame to prevent lumping.
    I thing instead of a file, a whetstone would yield finer filings. Or should we call these filings "stonings"? 🤔

  • @civilizationkills3138
    @civilizationkills3138 Год назад

    Sp happy to see you back!❤️

  • @systemofapwne
    @systemofapwne Год назад +1

    Working with Yb as a physicist my own, the green looked similar, but not the same, as the wavelength of 556 nm, corresponding to the 1S0 -> 3P1 transition. TBH, I would have guessed to see a blueish/uv tint at 399 nm coming from the 1S0 -> 1P1 transition (the strongest one on the groundstate).

    • @brainandforce
      @brainandforce Год назад +1

      The green transition is right at the sweet spot for your eyes' photoreceptors...the near UV transition, not so much.

  • @squishybrick
    @squishybrick Год назад

    I love that periodic table of patrons.. Wierdly sad music, though. Has more of a mourning vibe rather than a warm one.

  • @marcel_max
    @marcel_max Год назад

    Welcome back, you were missed

  • @HanzelikR
    @HanzelikR Год назад

    Ytterbium is used in fiber laser resonators to generate the laser beam that cuts metals.

  • @vincdem01
    @vincdem01 Год назад

    Thank you so much for what you are so amazingly do!

  • @jimsvideos7201
    @jimsvideos7201 Год назад

    The PTFE reaction was a fun surprise!

  • @chromatic91
    @chromatic91 Год назад

    I spent my summers in Ytterby and I never even knew about this element!

  • @beeble2003
    @beeble2003 Год назад

    7:25 "But a lump of metal isn't very useful."
    Suit yourself but I, for one, welcome our new robot overlords.

  • @JohnAranita
    @JohnAranita Год назад +1

    I have an educational shower curtain. Printed on it is Periodic Table of Elements.

  • @kmarasin
    @kmarasin Год назад

    10:53 Iowa State University grad here, we have a building named after Spedding

  • @giordy9013
    @giordy9013 Год назад

    New element always a great day

  • @hamoudi_d
    @hamoudi_d Год назад

    Hi Professor, Ib think many people are waiting desperately for your team to post new videos, also we're missing the other chemistry. Please make an update soon!

  • @franklinblunt69
    @franklinblunt69 Год назад

    An inner transition metal element reaching out the Lanthanides along that 6th period. PT can seem similar to geography, thx for the demos. There must be isotopes & ores determined since that early rather precise ore analysis by Msr Marignac ...by now atomic weight, rxn rate, & further possible determine properties & reactivity with those ion exchanges & spectroscopic applications.😁

  • @ZirconGames
    @ZirconGames Год назад

    Good to see you in health professor!

  • @misterhatman5771
    @misterhatman5771 Год назад +1

    Is nobody gonna talk about him rolling his R’s?!? Emerrrrald Green

  • @markiangooley
    @markiangooley Год назад +1

    Ytterby. So much squeezed out of one name and place.

  • @jackielinde7568
    @jackielinde7568 Год назад

    Would be fun to run the light from the burning Ytterbium through a spectrograph and see if we get the same spectrum as what is expected.

  • @majikglustik9704
    @majikglustik9704 Год назад

    Been missing you.
    There you are...

  • @hattielankford4775
    @hattielankford4775 Год назад

    Thank you.

  • @derderrr7220
    @derderrr7220 Год назад

    i'm curious as to how such things would react in pitch the luminescence of crystaline interaction at specific energy levels i'm curious as to if this element has a pressure reaction say if you hit a small bit with a hammer if it would or a large bit with a punch tool in combo with a hammer blow if it has discernible triboluminescence that is detectable without much hastle. great video!

  • @Cavemankind_
    @Cavemankind_ Год назад

    Love you guys! Thanks!

  • @ΔημητρηςΜπουκλας-ι6μ

    I'm really surprised he smelled it directly from the bottle. It's one of the first things on the big "don't do" list of chemistry and professors say it all the time.

  • @DoomDutch
    @DoomDutch Год назад

    I've smelled Ammonium Hydroxide before; when I heard him cough, I genuinely felt it in my own nose at that moment

  • @aliasname5518
    @aliasname5518 Год назад

    Your hair looks magnificent!

  • @mattlogue1300
    @mattlogue1300 Год назад

    Thanks!

  • @felixthecleaner8843
    @felixthecleaner8843 Год назад +1

    'great science - from a scientist looking scientist - Awesome!

  • @pyr0duck676
    @pyr0duck676 Год назад

    If I had to guess, the fluorine in the PTFE is acting in a similar way that chlorine donors do in pyrotechnic compositions.

  • @Khalrua
    @Khalrua Год назад

    I love this channel

  • @kieronparr3403
    @kieronparr3403 Год назад

    Did Neil speak? When the acid goes in. "Oopsie daisies,,," 8:11