Uranium hexafluoride actually is real. You're right about the 4 bonds if it was carbon or other elements in the second period. Uranium hexafluoride is a white substance that is highly unstable, highly toxic, and makes hydrofluoric acid when it's exposed to water. It's also what we use to separate U235 and U238 to enrich uranium. Sorry for the correction here. Your videos are awesome and always bring laughs! Keep making these!
@@LandisSeralian No worries! It's a common mistake since they teach people carbon can only have 4 bonds which is correct, but larger atoms like sulfur or uranium can have 6. High school and 100 and 200 level college classes usually leave the second part out.
Who doesn't love a nice dusting of it on their yellowcake? And never apologize for teaching someone something new! It's not like you were gatekeeping or condescending, just pointing out an interesting and potentially useful fact!
To add further, Lewis Dot Structures are models of the molecular strucure and, like all models, fail in certain scenarios. There are the usual exeptions to the octet rule as is mentioned but there are also unusual exeptions as well as mentioned below. Quantum mechanics does an adequate job at being a brtter model (from most-eveything seen; however, most solutions can't be solved in closed form solutions, so numarical methods are often used. In my honors intro chem class which was really a quantum mech class, the professor mentioned how a colleague was able to get an atom with some absurd ammount of bonds (12 or 16 or something) that were extremely short lived, much like the man made super-heavy elements. Sadly, I cant remember the details well or which elements were used.
Playing this new story line amd fighting the lost was abit difficult not bc they were tough but bc the all speak at once and the filter they used for the voices makes it hard and overstimulating to hear
I got so annoyed with not understanding what people mean when they say "stolen valour". I finally looked up what valour means and now, I'm even more confused. How do you steal bravery? Are you going to give it back? 🤨
It means pretending to be a service member. It's a thing rather sad individuals do to try to get social clout, respect, or discounts. It's stolen because they're often pretending to have earned something / done heroic things, which is especially disrespectful to those who sacrificed for their service.
Uranium hexafluoride actually is real. You're right about the 4 bonds if it was carbon or other elements in the second period. Uranium hexafluoride is a white substance that is highly unstable, highly toxic, and makes hydrofluoric acid when it's exposed to water. It's also what we use to separate U235 and U238 to enrich uranium.
Sorry for the correction here. Your videos are awesome and always bring laughs! Keep making these!
I just went to fact check that chemistry info myself, thanks for the more detailed write up than I would have given!
@@LandisSeralian No worries! It's a common mistake since they teach people carbon can only have 4 bonds which is correct, but larger atoms like sulfur or uranium can have 6. High school and 100 and 200 level college classes usually leave the second part out.
Who doesn't love a nice dusting of it on their yellowcake?
And never apologize for teaching someone something new! It's not like you were gatekeeping or condescending, just pointing out an interesting and potentially useful fact!
To add further, Lewis Dot Structures are models of the molecular strucure and, like all models, fail in certain scenarios. There are the usual exeptions to the octet rule as is mentioned but there are also unusual exeptions as well as mentioned below. Quantum mechanics does an adequate job at being a brtter model (from most-eveything seen; however, most solutions can't be solved in closed form solutions, so numarical methods are often used. In my honors intro chem class which was really a quantum mech class, the professor mentioned how a colleague was able to get an atom with some absurd ammount of bonds (12 or 16 or something) that were extremely short lived, much like the man made super-heavy elements. Sadly, I cant remember the details well or which elements were used.
man this is fire
Started wearing my maroon beret in 76 because of this series
It's not Dutch it's deutsch (German)
getting in here early :D cant wait to listen to this while i draw
😅 um, he was on Vault-Tec board!? Bro don't trust him for a sec 😂
if Appalachia is Post-Apocalypse, does this make Shenandoah a post-post-apocalypse.
ah pain killers so maybe morphine
morphine and heroin very close chemically speaking that might be what was on the board
Playing this new story line amd fighting the lost was abit difficult not bc they were tough but bc the all speak at once and the filter they used for the voices makes it hard and overstimulating to hear
I got so annoyed with not understanding what people mean when they say "stolen valour". I finally looked up what valour means and now, I'm even more confused. How do you steal bravery? Are you going to give it back? 🤨
It means pretending to be a service member.
It's a thing rather sad individuals do to try to get social clout, respect, or discounts.
It's stolen because they're often pretending to have earned something / done heroic things, which is especially disrespectful to those who sacrificed for their service.