There was no doubt I'd watch all of this. I like information dense videos, and this is at least gold density, if not osmium :). Super job, lots of hard work obviously put into it, and somehow the narration remained strong and focused for the whole thing. I am not sure of the ranking criteria, but my hot take for the sake of discussion (not criticism) is almost identical except: S - Br instead of K or Na? A - Neon? Really? Mo over Al, Cr or Ni? B - promote Al to A C - the lanthanide divide in B and C seems perfect D- All Z > 100 should go to F. Useless, pointless vanity projects that are an embarrassment to science Also, I know these can't be edited after publishing, but the balloon application for Helium is a very trivial use. It's applications for cryogenics, industrial leak detection, and chipmunk voices are more important. Plus, the graphic shows a hot air balloon :). Thank you for the nice presentation.
Very glad you enjoyed it and see the dedication that went into making it! Never knew helium could be used for so many different applications 🤣 appreciate it!
berkelium should be d or if there was e it would be e. it was used in nuclear weapon testing. true f tier elements are astatine, francium, protactinium and einsteinium or higher atomic numbers
Aviso: el siguiente comentario es mi opinión de la opinión del creador del video, sí, pero no busco ofender y no respetar dicha opinión pwp. Neón en A?, el neón no es indispensable para existir, ¿cómo va a estar a la altura algo tan históricamente importante para las vidas humanas que sirve para ámbitos como salud y tecnología (Helio, litio y flúor) con algo con énfasis en la industria de la decoración/iluminación (neón)?.
Uranium and plotonium are the best elements they make you feel all nice and warm inside.
where are these ideas coming from xD
That's a great question
Love this video so much, altho I would probably put lead in S tier for its special properties
Boron being in the B-Tier is so fitting
There was no doubt I'd watch all of this. I like information dense videos, and this is at least gold density, if not osmium :). Super job, lots of hard work obviously put into it, and somehow the narration remained strong and focused for the whole thing.
I am not sure of the ranking criteria, but my hot take for the sake of discussion (not criticism) is almost identical except:
S - Br instead of K or Na?
A - Neon? Really? Mo over Al, Cr or Ni?
B - promote Al to A
C - the lanthanide divide in B and C seems perfect
D- All Z > 100 should go to F. Useless, pointless vanity projects that are an embarrassment to science
Also, I know these can't be edited after publishing, but the balloon application for Helium is a very trivial use. It's applications for cryogenics, industrial leak detection, and chipmunk voices are more important. Plus, the graphic shows a hot air balloon :).
Thank you for the nice presentation.
Very glad you enjoyed it and see the dedication that went into making it! Never knew helium could be used for so many different applications 🤣 appreciate it!
Nice vid
115 is used in alien space crafts.
moscovium?
Maybe for a few seconds, until it decayed away..@@skippitysmithsonshorts
trust me bro
berkelium should be d or if there was e it would be e. it was used in nuclear weapon testing. true f tier elements are astatine, francium, protactinium and einsteinium or higher atomic numbers
interesting opinion, but valid
underrated
Aviso: el siguiente comentario es mi opinión de la opinión del creador del video, sí, pero no busco ofender y no respetar dicha opinión pwp.
Neón en A?, el neón no es indispensable para existir, ¿cómo va a estar a la altura algo tan históricamente importante para las vidas humanas que sirve para ámbitos como salud y tecnología (Helio, litio y flúor) con algo con énfasis en la industria de la decoración/iluminación (neón)?.