apparently, all metals including alkali metals which are extremely strong reducing agents are able to form covalent bonds. same goes for the synthetic elements which can only exist for a few microseconds. 😆
this is a pretty fun video! (long comment incoming) i have a few things that kind of bothered me though lol since i'm really addicted to chemistry rn (grade 11, and also i could be very wrong about a lot of this stuff so fair warning!) the explanation of what the lewis dot structure is could be improved by a lot, since it doesn't really explain what it is or how to use it. "you need to have only a dot and if there are two dots in one area, they're gonna be called lone pairs." a lot of questions could be asked like: what are the dots? why do they join? how do you know how many dots a given element has? what actually are lone pairs and what do they do? like, you don't have to get too into the nitty gritty but a simple explanation starting from electron shells and valence electrons (bohr model) then using some simple molecules as examples (eg H2O, CH4, NH3, etc) and maybe a touch of VSEPR theory could go a long way, and even show how much crazier this type of molecule (while obviously not possible in real life) is compared to them. especially if you're going to be making science content like you seem to be doing a lot of (education /STEM youtube yayy!!!) i feel like it would definitely make the video more engaging for audiences who may not be super familiar with it! and if would for sure help contextualize what it is that you're actually doing (hence that other comment by the person who said they were confused) also i kinda had a hard time understanding what exactly the connection between the fractal and the molecule was near the end. you've got a really good personality for this type of video, and you were definitely doing it right because it was really fun to watch and engaging! good luck on your youtube endeavours! :D you've got my like and sub :))
no wonder, this molecule would break the laws of chemistry and physics so hard, it would be impossible to synthesise and would break down in microseconds 😂
apparently, all metals including alkali metals which are extremely strong reducing agents are able to form covalent bonds.
same goes for the synthetic elements which can only exist for a few microseconds. 😆
this is a pretty fun video! (long comment incoming)
i have a few things that kind of bothered me though lol since i'm really addicted to chemistry rn (grade 11, and also i could be very wrong about a lot of this stuff so fair warning!)
the explanation of what the lewis dot structure is could be improved by a lot, since it doesn't really explain what it is or how to use it.
"you need to have only a dot and if there are two dots in one area, they're gonna be called lone pairs."
a lot of questions could be asked like:
what are the dots? why do they join? how do you know how many dots a given element has? what actually are lone pairs and what do they do?
like, you don't have to get too into the nitty gritty but a simple explanation starting from electron shells and valence electrons (bohr model) then using some simple molecules as examples (eg H2O, CH4, NH3, etc) and maybe a touch of VSEPR theory could go a long way, and even show how much crazier this type of molecule (while obviously not possible in real life) is compared to them.
especially if you're going to be making science content like you seem to be doing a lot of (education /STEM youtube yayy!!!) i feel like it would definitely make the video more engaging for audiences who may not be super familiar with it! and if would for sure help contextualize what it is that you're actually doing (hence that other comment by the person who said they were confused)
also i kinda had a hard time understanding what exactly the connection between the fractal and the molecule was near the end.
you've got a really good personality for this type of video, and you were definitely doing it right because it was really fun to watch and engaging! good luck on your youtube endeavours! :D
you've got my like and sub :))
I did this video for fun and for my teacher. Next time I would give more info and a grasp of what I'm doing lol.😂
Thank you for the support 💥💥💥💥💥
There is one part I didn't show it's called the Fourier series
I got confuse :(
no wonder, this molecule would break the laws of chemistry and physics so hard, it would be impossible to synthesise and would break down in microseconds 😂