Which Molecules are the Most Cursed?

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  • Опубликовано: 1 июл 2022
  • In this video, I decide which molecules are most cursed!
    / thatchemist
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Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @robert36902
    @robert36902 2 года назад +2559

    As a non-chemist, it almost feels like you're pulling my leg with "squaric acid" and "ladderanes" - what's next - low-graderenes, elcheaporenes? ;)

    • @That_Chemist
      @That_Chemist  2 года назад +247

      haha

    • @dizzydaisy909
      @dizzydaisy909 2 года назад +81

      @@That_Chemist Are you?

    • @That_Chemist
      @That_Chemist  2 года назад +208

      @@dizzydaisy909 I am not

    • @Tobbzn
      @Tobbzn 2 года назад +420

      Everyone's hahaing until the sequel video introduces the legpullerenes

    • @londonalicante
      @londonalicante 2 года назад +176

      @@Tobbzn The sequel should have buckminsterfullerene, which is 60 carbon atoms arranged like a soccerball.
      And no, I'm not pulling your leg.

  • @Virtuous_Rogue
    @Virtuous_Rogue 2 года назад +2773

    Idea for you: mechanisms tier list. Undergrad O Chem covers about a million of them and it would be interesting to see what is actually useful and what is just taught to make sure it gets covered.
    Edit: He made it and the link is in one of the replies (can't get my phone to copy it).

    • @C4pungMaster
      @C4pungMaster 2 года назад +103

      Great idea. Rank them by personal favorite, accessibility, relative usefulness, and danger/risk issue

    • @shitpostfella5528
      @shitpostfella5528 2 года назад +9

      I second this!

    • @matiastripaldi406
      @matiastripaldi406 2 года назад +54

      I learnt so many mechanisms and now remember none of them (since i don't do ochem daily) eventually you remember the basic stuff like nucleophiles, acidity etc

    • @brandonb6164
      @brandonb6164 2 года назад +3

      Yes please

    • @piotrsykut6999
      @piotrsykut6999 2 года назад +21

      What's also interesting to me is that I've started to realized that every University will teach you basic reactions that everyone should know like Diels-Alder, Friedel-Crafts etc. but they may differ in some more advanced stuff and I'd like to see the difference

  • @MrBabyBitch666
    @MrBabyBitch666 2 года назад +804

    Squaric acid might not be cursed but squarines definitely are! If you've never seen freshly synthesized squarines, it's almost impossible to describe. It's iridescent blue around the edges and deep blood red in the bulk of the liquid, and the colors shift and meld as you move the vial around. Even when you can see it right in front of you it doesn't make sense.

    • @That_Chemist
      @That_Chemist  2 года назад +87

      Wow

    • @JoelHernandez-tz3vk
      @JoelHernandez-tz3vk 2 года назад +52

      Wonder if someone would like to rate the most cursed interactions with light.

    • @nitroflux_o1040
      @nitroflux_o1040 2 года назад +14

      I love wacky colors they are so cool

    • @id01_01
      @id01_01 2 года назад +1

      I can't find any mention of its color! May I have a picture?

    • @MrBabyBitch666
      @MrBabyBitch666 2 года назад +33

      @@id01_01 that's a big part of the problem, few pictures exist and those that do don't actually capture what it looks like in real life
      This one is an ok example (not the dye we made but a squarine nonetheless): chemistry-europe.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/cms/asset/cae2565c-f6fd-4a0e-9236-8ccb427694ac/mfig000.jpg

  • @Mejsiek
    @Mejsiek 2 года назад +767

    Literally any molecule "synthesized" by Figueroa group should go to SSS tier.

  • @dreadlindwyrm
    @dreadlindwyrm 2 года назад +433

    I would love a "cursed inorganics" video. In the vein of "things I will not work with". :P
    FOOF and ClF3 come to mind, along with "how many nitrogens can we bond to each other" explosives.

    • @ProfessorYana
      @ProfessorYana 2 года назад +21

      Thioacetone.

    • @tttITA10
      @tttITA10 2 года назад +41

      FOOF seems scary just as a concept :O

    • @ProfessorYana
      @ProfessorYana 2 года назад +39

      @@tttITA10 Even worse is what A. G. Streng of Temple University did while testing its reactivity.
      Amongst other things, he reacted it with:
      * Ethanol
      * Ammonia
      * Red phosphorus
      * Elemental chlorine (*twice!*)
      * Perchloryl fluoride
      * Water ice
      * And last, but not least... *Chlorine trifluoride*
      The guy was the textbook definition of "mad scientist".

    • @u.v.s.5583
      @u.v.s.5583 2 года назад +16

      @@tttITA10 Does it react with F-O-O-O-O-O-O-O-O-O-O-O-F though?

    • @loganosmolinski4446
      @loganosmolinski4446 2 года назад +9

      @@u.v.s.5583 *Flinch*

  • @Vracaum
    @Vracaum 2 года назад +582

    I don't know if there would be much to say, but a cursed notation tier list. For example, one of my friends used to draw benzene rings with the double bond OUT of the ring. Still gives me trauma nowadays.

    • @jonahglass-hussain4568
      @jonahglass-hussain4568 2 года назад +15

      I would love to see this. Take suggestions for notation from people on the discord, maybe?

    • @estherstreet4582
      @estherstreet4582 2 года назад +25

      Anyone who draws their hexagons as like a lozenge shape with right angles on the ends mildly annoys me. What, you can't draw a 120 degree angle?

    • @thor1829
      @thor1829 2 года назад +80

      @@estherstreet4582 Sometimes during Org chem I was so lazy, I just wrote the word Aryl in a circle.

    • @arcm4210
      @arcm4210 2 года назад +22

      @@thor1829 based

    • @Speederzzz
      @Speederzzz 2 года назад +24

      A professor of mine once drew a benzene as a rectangle with 2 implied carbons in the middle of the long sides...

  • @redstormfighter4863
    @redstormfighter4863 2 года назад +128

    This is such niche content for an even more niche audience and I absolutely love it.

    • @That_Chemist
      @That_Chemist  2 года назад +33

      Or it’s niche content for a wider audience - I mean at 100k views I don’t thing it’s niche anymore

  • @jogandsp
    @jogandsp 2 года назад +197

    If you do inorganic cursed structures, don't forget metal-metal quintuple bonds

    • @thor1829
      @thor1829 2 года назад +36

      Speaking from experience, inorganic chemistry and heterogeneous catalysis reactions in particular are the most cursed type of chemistry to exist: some of the intermediate species on metal particles aren't just cursed, they're an insult to all of God's creation.

    • @sweetshiba_
      @sweetshiba_ 2 года назад +1

      ooo definitely please do this!! i had heard of ligand stabilized metal-metal quatruple bonds, but not quintuple

    • @californium-2526
      @californium-2526 Год назад +1

      Dimolybdenum and ditungsten, which are known in the gaseous phase, contain a metal-metal *sextuple bond.*

  • @Kircic
    @Kircic 2 года назад +196

    as someone who isn’t too into chemistry, this is by far one of the most interesting videos i’ve seen in a while. i had no idea what any of these are, but your explanations of each molecule made me understand what each of these do. crazy good video man, keep it up.

    • @That_Chemist
      @That_Chemist  2 года назад +29

      I’m so glad to hear that :)
      RUclips started showing my videos to a wider audience, and i really hope that it is educational for non-experts. Even if it sparks your curiosity, I would be glad to be a part of it!

  • @trevglasbey3924
    @trevglasbey3924 2 года назад +32

    My PhD project in the late '70's early 80's was trying to synthesise monocyclic azetes. Its cool to see someone else has even heard of them

  • @robertlapointe4093
    @robertlapointe4093 2 года назад +118

    If bond strain is a requisite for being cursed, epoxides and beta-lactones should have a spot on this list. Not to mention that the simplest members (ethylene oxide and b-propiolactone) are astonishingly potent carcinogens and can undergo explosive polymerization.

    • @That_Chemist
      @That_Chemist  2 года назад +25

      Those do sound interesting, and definitely cursed

    • @lloydevans2900
      @lloydevans2900 2 года назад +9

      According to the famous rocket chemistry book "Ignition!" by John Drury Clark, ethylene oxide can also be used as a monopropellant rocket fuel, albeit not a particularly powerful one. Allegedly, if ignited with a glow plug, it "burns" itself by converting to a mixture of carbon monoxide and methane. While no commercial rocket was ever developed to use this, it was apparently used in a few APU type gas generators.

  • @fletcherreder6091
    @fletcherreder6091 2 года назад +129

    You gotta do inorganic, that's where the real cursed stuff happens. Tetraxenonogold for example.

    • @That_Chemist
      @That_Chemist  2 года назад +16

      I will in due time

    • @notgreatgale
      @notgreatgale 2 года назад +25

      xenon... bonding... to gold? that sounds illegal

    • @californium-2526
      @californium-2526 Год назад +7

      That compound is an S++ immediately. Gold(II) not dimerizing (as in gold(II) sulfate), and having four xenon(0) ligands. Truly a curse from the underworld.

    • @chirone_
      @chirone_ Год назад

      @@californium-2526 it's so cursed that you can only produce it by using the strongest acid in the world

  • @SpeakwithAryan
    @SpeakwithAryan 2 года назад +33

    Never thought I'd be watching a 20 minute video on organic chemistry unless it was a week before an exam, but here I am.

    • @That_Chemist
      @That_Chemist  2 года назад +2

      I hope you enjoyed it :)

    • @Ne1vaan
      @Ne1vaan Год назад

      Enjoy the topic but hated the class.

  • @meme__supreme3373
    @meme__supreme3373 2 года назад +88

    I know it's an organic coordination compound rather than just a purely organic compound, but I'm sad that Chromium(II) acetate hydrate didn't make the list with its *quadruple bond.*

    • @robertlapointe4093
      @robertlapointe4093 2 года назад +26

      The anhydrous molybdenum analog is a beautiful yellow, I've also made the Mo2(2,6-C6H3(OMe)2)4 analog which is a deep purple by transmission and hot pink by reflection.

    • @That_Chemist
      @That_Chemist  2 года назад +14

      Interesting

    • @namibjDerEchte
      @namibjDerEchte 2 года назад +5

      Now I wonder if dicarbon molecules are somewhat stable as a low-pressure gas...

    • @rayres1074
      @rayres1074 2 года назад

      Yeah, that quadruple bond is definitely cursed

  • @airysquared
    @airysquared 2 года назад +51

    My knowledge of chemistry is basically a high schooler’s and I only recognized a few chemical names/types, but I was still amused by the wild and wacky chemical structures. I’m going to watch your mycotoxin video next.

  • @joshtriska
    @joshtriska 2 года назад +20

    Not even kidding, saw this in my feed and thought "I wonder if decaborane is on that list". Sure enough! It's a wonderful oddball, supposedly smells of sulfur even though it has no thiol groups, but I have no plans to verify this.

  • @bassistck24
    @bassistck24 2 года назад +50

    What’s amazing is that several of these are represented in the scaffolds of natural products. The precise biosynthetic pathway of enediynes remains one of the unsolved holy grails of our field. Natural product enediynes (i.e. Calicheamicin) are definitely S tier to me haha.

    • @londonalicante
      @londonalicante 2 года назад +1

      Wow, I looked up calicheamicin on wikipedia and it really should NOT exist. That enediyne is in an unholy bicyclic ring thing, and elsewhere there are 3 sulphur atoms in a chain!
      Of course, the sugar units could not be normal. They had to be aminated. And linked with an S bridge. And an N-O bridge!
      And an Iodine atom. Just because.

  • @thor1829
    @thor1829 2 года назад +338

    Was that laughingly stated "although other members of the chemistry community have struggled to synthesise them in a timely manner but perhaps there's a good reason for that." at 16:32 a reference to Ex&F? xD

    • @dexter2392
      @dexter2392 2 года назад +75

      Yes he's trying to make cubane for 3 years already and is failing

    • @evanlabrant5448
      @evanlabrant5448 2 года назад +84

      To be fair, Tom is doing it in his backyard shed with mostly off-the-shelf supplies and basically no analytical instrumentation.

    • @joshhoover1202
      @joshhoover1202 2 года назад +54

      @@dexter2392 I would hardly say he is failing (except and understanding the relationship between voltage and current).

    • @thor1829
      @thor1829 2 года назад +21

      @@evanlabrant5448 I know, and he's doing pretty well for someone doing as he himself put it 'shitty jam jar chemistry in my backyard shed'. I'd say the only memeworthy fuckup he made was with powering the UV-LEDs.

    • @evanlabrant5448
      @evanlabrant5448 2 года назад +18

      @@thor1829 Don't get me wrong, Tom's channel is memeable chem fuckup pay dirt. That's why (IMHO) it's the most entertaining DIY chem channel on YT. The fact that some of the stuff he does works at all is mind boggling, then add on the comedy and it's pure gold. I'm a big Tom fan, just in case it isn't obvious lol.

  • @thesledgehammerblog
    @thesledgehammerblog 2 года назад +14

    I don't have much more than a high school chem class to my name, but all I know is that the more Ns you can see in the diagram, the faster you should run away.

  • @andrewjin6618
    @andrewjin6618 2 года назад +9

    16:34
    Damn, you really had to call out extractions and ire like that

  • @Speederzzz
    @Speederzzz 2 года назад +18

    Nowadays catanes are often relatively selectively formed by using metal coordination between an open ring and a closed one, and then closing the second ring. Sometimes a covalent bond bond is used that is broken afterwards, hydrolysed for example.
    In the past it was pure luck, so they'd repeat the same step over and over and would get a less than 1% yield over 20 repetitions.

  • @davidshelly9142
    @davidshelly9142 2 года назад +25

    My whole undergrad research was about allenes! They're a massive pain in the ass to make, but they're stable once you make them. We were eventually trying to make Allenes with naphthalene rings on both ends with one end being e- donating and one being e- accepting then looking at the crystal properties of the molecules.

  • @tipptop
    @tipptop 2 года назад +13

    In Chemistry class we had to build structures for C6H6. What funny is that we actually came up with molecules like Dewar Benzene and Prismane, the latter our teacher didn't even know about.

    • @That_Chemist
      @That_Chemist  2 года назад

      You guys were some smart young bucks

  • @NickWrightDataYT
    @NickWrightDataYT Год назад +3

    As a data analyst/software engineer I have no idea what any of this means but some of the glimmers of concepts I'm getting here actually scare me, so good job picking out the cursed molecules

  • @dleonidae
    @dleonidae 2 года назад +3

    Since pentacyanocyclopentadiene is so cursed, I propose we call it the Devil's Paddlewheel

  • @theotherdill6675
    @theotherdill6675 2 года назад +6

    I've been watching Extractions and Ire's cubane series for over a year, I'd say that's fairly cursed

    • @gabrielmarshall5541
      @gabrielmarshall5541 Год назад

      As soon as he mentioned the struggle for a timely synthesis I knew this was a cheeky hint at E&Ire ;))

  • @GNew0
    @GNew0 2 года назад +10

    i'm more of a mathematician
    , and i know absolutely nothing about chemistry, but this video was really interesting and entertained to watch, great job

    • @That_Chemist
      @That_Chemist  2 года назад

      Thanks :) I have another one tomorrow!

  • @sciana21
    @sciana21 2 года назад +20

    me, who understands chemistry on the level of H + 2O = H2O : Ummm... yes.

  • @leothecrafter4808
    @leothecrafter4808 2 года назад +6

    Not neccessarely cursed, but funny looking, all the molecules from Old MacDonald Named a Compound: Branched Enynenynols

    • @That_Chemist
      @That_Chemist  2 года назад +2

      I love this comment

    • @leothecrafter4808
      @leothecrafter4808 2 года назад +4

      @@That_Chemist What makes it even better is that this is a legit paper in published in ACS

  • @rayzhang3425
    @rayzhang3425 2 года назад +18

    Yeah for sure I've heard some of those words before the
    Fr though I've seen shapes today I never thought I'd never thought possible and thank you for enlightening my day like that, TC!

  • @Iurien
    @Iurien Год назад +6

    I had to rewatch the first half of this video because I was entirely convinced that none of these existed- I thought you were just pulling my leg, especially with squaric acid 😭. When you got to Metformin (I knew what that was already), I started looking some of these molecules up and had to take some time to process that these are actually real…
    “Ladderanes” oh my god

  • @JoseLuis-uo8zp
    @JoseLuis-uo8zp 2 года назад +26

    Catenanes are synthesized by forming copper-nitrogen coordination compounds with two half rings and then doing a cyclization reaction to close the rings, then copper is hydrolized and catenane is formed. Nobel prize 2015, quite interesting stuff by JP Sauvage.

    • @That_Chemist
      @That_Chemist  2 года назад +5

      Very cool!

    • @hisfriend2892
      @hisfriend2892 2 года назад +3

      Thats one way for sure. Our group just published a JACS on using these types of catenanes in gels as a tunable crosslinker. You can basically use any kind of templation strategy though. Other common ones are H bonding and donor acceptor

    • @pamesman
      @pamesman 2 года назад +1

      Gracias joseluis, casi tengo que explicarselo yo

  • @vincent-danielgirard4873
    @vincent-danielgirard4873 2 года назад +14

    If you do a tier list on inorganic molecules, please review DIBORANE. I can't get my head around that one.

    • @Mercure250
      @Mercure250 2 года назад +1

      *looks it up* WHAT THE F IS THIS

    • @californium-2526
      @californium-2526 2 года назад

      @@Mercure250 3-center-2-electron bondings be like!

    • @Mercure250
      @Mercure250 Год назад +1

      @@californium-2526 Yeah lol that was new to me, both a neat find and a cursed find

  • @mattcarnevali
    @mattcarnevali 2 года назад +5

    I had a professor use several of these on assignments and exams to teach point groups in an undergrad course, it was so hard

  • @manikuddin2540
    @manikuddin2540 Год назад +4

    1:50 *Because there are a lot of Boron in it, I'm gonna put it in B tier*
    Makes sense

  • @lorner96
    @lorner96 2 года назад +8

    I'm a physicist but I love these videos. I swear you guys have no fear of death in the lab compared to us

    • @wernerviehhauser94
      @wernerviehhauser94 2 года назад

      Oh, the chemists I knew from University (late 90s) were VERY keen on safety while we physicists were looking for the lost 2W laser beam with a piece of black cardboard with the laser running or cleaning laser active polymers off glassware with dichromic acid ..... Looking back, I'm surprised that nothing happened.

    • @lorner96
      @lorner96 2 года назад

      @@wernerviehhauser94 my university is particularly proud of only ever having one postgrad student permanently blind themselves with a laser beam. For the most part we're more of a danger to extremely expensive equipment (laser optics) than to ourselves

  • @raymondserfontein3203
    @raymondserfontein3203 2 года назад +8

    This is the first time I saw the chemical structure of Metformin and Chlorhexidine, and I have to tell you, I'm gonna be a lot more skeptical of these molecule in the future. Because both look like ingredients for weapons of mass destruction...

  • @PajamaMuncher
    @PajamaMuncher 2 года назад +17

    I had an idea for a series where you could go through each decade and discuss the 5ish most important discoveries/accomplishments in chemistry and talk about them like your “important papers” series. Just a thought, great video!

  • @Nikkidafox
    @Nikkidafox Год назад +3

    >You synthesize Carborane.
    >It's a 1.
    >It explodes somehow and you take 10 fire damage.

    • @That_Chemist
      @That_Chemist  Год назад

      a chemistry-themed DnD game is a great idea for content (I won't do this, but someone should!)

  • @Yora21
    @Yora21 2 года назад +6

    This seems like an upgrade for people who already know all of these molecules.

  • @flaplaya
    @flaplaya 2 года назад +11

    Just wanted to say thanks for these. I've learned a lot of new chemistry had never heard of Azete or Thiete. These exotic compounds are my true passion. That bullverine is wicked it must be a potent carcinogen. I think about aromaticity when that compound is described with the resonant bonds neither here nor there. Love this show!

  • @indigateau241
    @indigateau241 2 года назад +8

    There are certainly cursed inorganics as well. Polythiazyl perhaps.

    • @koukouzee2923
      @koukouzee2923 2 года назад +3

      I usually watch chemical force for cursed inorganics
      Like out of nowhere he grabs a 30 years old ampoule of some chemical that you won't even think existed

    • @indigateau241
      @indigateau241 2 года назад +2

      The fact he nonchalantly burns $70 dollars worth of decaborane

    • @dexter2392
      @dexter2392 2 года назад +3

      Sulfur nitride, sulfur hexafluoride, hydrogen polysulfides, krypton/xenon oxyfluorides, diimine, orthoperiodic acid, diphosphorus tetraiodide, borazine. Most of those are like C tier tho.

  • @marcopolo8584
    @marcopolo8584 2 года назад +7

    You noted, but kind of glossed over that mellitic anhydride is a mineral, meaning it's naturally occurring geologically which is pretty neat imo. There are a decent amount of complex, cursed biochemistry, but not much cursed geology.

  • @colin3504
    @colin3504 2 года назад +9

    I only studied a tiny bit of chemistry and I don't understand anything, I love it

  • @kingnotail3838
    @kingnotail3838 2 года назад +4

    You should probably have pointed out that ladderanes are natural products, which is proper mental

  • @theangledsaxon6765
    @theangledsaxon6765 2 года назад +4

    PLEASE DO A CURSED INORG TIER LIST
    I have spent so much time observing the most cursed shit coming out of the next door lab, like it’s become my favorite pastime and I’d love to see this codified.

  • @Thesnakerox
    @Thesnakerox Год назад

    This is my first time watching one of these videos and I love how it's presented almost exactly like a lecture I'd get with one of my online textbooks

  • @frankmercer7009
    @frankmercer7009 2 года назад +2

    Another very nice and informative presentation. I was happy to see ketenes on the list. My graduate work dealt with the cycloaddition reactions of chlorocycanoketene, used to prepare beta-lactams by cycloaddition reaction to imines.

  • @sealpiercing8476
    @sealpiercing8476 2 года назад +14

    Methyl cyclopropene might be interesting as rocket fuel if it's not explosive (it seems like it might be explosive). Good density, lots of enthalpy of formation, boils at 12 C. Could do with more hydrogen but such is the price of bond strain I guess. You could burn it with peroxide (also high density and avoids cryogenics entirely) and get similar specific impulse as all these newfangled methane-oxygen rockets.

    • @TheBackyardChemist
      @TheBackyardChemist 2 года назад

      My favoruites for alternative rocket fuels are:
      1. Straight cyclopropane (not overly reactive, relatively cheap, plenty of strain and hydrogens)
      2. Spiropentane (liquid at room temp, lots of strain, still a good amount of hydrogens)

    • @namibjDerEchte
      @namibjDerEchte 2 года назад

      Did you check the performance? You need oxygen for the carbon you have, but hydrogen and water are better exhausts due to lower molecular mass.

    • @sealpiercing8476
      @sealpiercing8476 2 года назад +3

      @@namibjDerEchte Yeah I put methyl cyclopropene-hydrogen peroxide through CEArun. Near stoichiometric it performs about as well as methane-oxygen for like chamber pressure and expansion ratio. I bet it would be hypergolic also, given the presence of the highly strained double bond. But that same property might make the MCP explosive.

  • @californium-2526
    @californium-2526 2 года назад +9

    These are an automatic S tier from me: [1.1.1]propellane (Surprisingly stable super-strained cycle, with ring strain of over 100 kcal/mol, or 418,4 kJ/mol.), bicyclo[1.1.1]pentane (A highly strained ring, it's useful for bioactive molecules.), catenanes (mechanical bonds), cubanes (cube), 1-methylcyclopropene (used to preserve apples), 2-cyclopropenecarboxylic acid (toxic but is removed by polymerization), prismane and its derivatives (explosive hydrocarbon), Dewar benzene and its derivatives, benzynes, any stable carbon oxides other than carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide (carbon suboxide, mellitic anhydride, ethylenetetracarboxylic dianhydride), pentacyanocyclopentadiene (Superacidity is impressive for a carbon acid with only nitrogens aside from its acidic hydrogen and its carbons. This shows the power of cyano as an electron withdrawing group.), moniliformin and squaric acid (both compounds represent vinylogous analogues of carboxylic acids, the former toxic, the latter, when twice-deprotonated, aromatic), ladderanes, allenes and (especially very long) cumulenes, ketenes (The parent is toxic and is a decomposition product of vitamin E, found in e-cigarette juice, which caused a spike in lung disease in the United States in 2020. The derivatives and their acetals are useful reagents.), azetes (especially of the Figueroa-Valverde type), dithietes, bullvalene, enediynes (chemotheraupetic drugs that are highly mutagenic), [12]helicene, dodecahydroxycyclohexane (stable for a perhydroxyaliphatic - or here, alicyclic - compound), superphane and cyclophanes, o-carborane, decaborane.
    Automatic A tier: Bodipy (Boron trifluoride, if hydrolyzed to, is toxic, and will hydrolyze to HF. Bodipy series represent useful ligands.), chlorhexidine (disinfectant), fusafungine (antibiotic), metformine (used to balance glucose levels in type 2 diabetics), 3-methyl-2H-furo[2,3-c]pyran-2-one (karrikinolide, the chemical of smoke), (3a¹s,5a¹s)-3a¹,5a¹-dimethyl-3a¹,5a¹-dihydropyrene (look at that name!), calix(4)arene (useful ligand).
    Other molecules that are an automatic S tier from me: Quadricyclane (photoelectricity), olympiadane (created just because), dioxygen difluoride (automatic), chlorine trifluoride (automatic), NanoKid (educational chemical), NanoCar (four buckminsterfullerene derivatives acting as wheels), buckminsterfullerene (room-temperature stable molecular carbon allotrope), cyclo[18]carbon (the chad explosive, consisting of just carbon), the first cyclocarbon to be synthesized, an all-carbon electron acceptor), polyynes (of astrochemical importance, especially long polyynes).
    Cursed chemicals are interesting in one way or another. I didn't rate anything below A here.

    • @californium-2526
      @californium-2526 2 года назад

      Note: Quadricyclanes are useful in photochemical heating, not photoelectricity.

  • @RoninCatholic
    @RoninCatholic 2 года назад +2

    Squaric Acid? Now I finally know what I need to dissolve some stubborn pixels!

  • @mslvc2011
    @mslvc2011 Год назад +4

    I took a year of organic chemistry in college. I was just a math major who liked making potions. And what did I get out of it? Now I can appreciate this video

  • @starsilverinfinity
    @starsilverinfinity 2 года назад +3

    Would love to see more of these, interesting and informative at the same time!

  • @HariboAG
    @HariboAG Год назад +2

    I accidentally made an allene once by the reaction of pyrrolidinone with propargylbromide using NaH as a base. The allenyl pyrrolidinone was surprisingly stable. I was also shocked that I could column it without problem.

    • @That_Chemist
      @That_Chemist  Год назад +1

      Yeah - you can usually do those alkylations with just K2CO3 in DMF or K3PO4 in toluene btw (the normal non-allene one)

  • @victorlaureys4896
    @victorlaureys4896 2 года назад +4

    Hey ! Love your work in general and the tier list series particularly ! Can be inspiring to see those twisted structures, somehow haha.
    I can relate for the helicene (M) or (P) enantiomers that they are usually made as racemic mixtures and then separated on a chiral HPLC. I'm working in a group where almost everyone make those.

    • @malsi3406
      @malsi3406 2 года назад +3

      Different approach here, working in a group making selectively one helicene enantiomer. Racemates are still synthesized for developing chiral LC methods to determine EE, but we can get 98+% of EE with some catalysts, conditions and substituents!

    • @That_Chemist
      @That_Chemist  2 года назад +1

      Thanks :)

  • @maxmuenchow
    @maxmuenchow 2 года назад +38

    As a pharmacy student I appreciate the inclusion of metformin

    • @Jokke13th
      @Jokke13th 2 года назад +6

      Great career choice. 🤟🏻

  • @defeatSpace
    @defeatSpace Год назад +4

    This video taught me that everyone is naturally cursed by proxy of chemicals.

  • @PJM257
    @PJM257 2 года назад +2

    "because it starts with a c we'll put in in the c tier"
    Sound logic if I've ever heard it.

  • @chesqen
    @chesqen 2 года назад +2

    I know they're not that cursed, but buckyballs with noble gases trapped inside them are just the funniest things to me. Also, you should include the helium dimer (He2) in an inorganic sequel video.

  • @cxool123
    @cxool123 2 года назад +7

    Id love to hear talk about azidoazide azide. It exploses when you look at it with that much nitrogen in it

    • @TagetesAlkesta
      @TagetesAlkesta 2 года назад +1

      Eh it’s not quite that touchy. Explosions and Fire made some and it wasn’t anything crazy, at least in the sensitivity department.

  • @kalrbaum
    @kalrbaum 2 года назад +8

    I work with catenanes and rotaxanes, they aren't cursed per se but often pretty Hard to make. Also we make tBu-calixarenes in our introductory o-chem lab, the tBu groups can the be removed by a retro-Friedel Crafts rxn to yield the calixarene shown in your Video, which works quite well

    • @That_Chemist
      @That_Chemist  2 года назад +1

      please share the papers in the discord, that sounds really cool!

  • @doplop
    @doplop 2 года назад +2

    as a non chemistry person i would put methyl cyclopropene in s tier. from what you said it sounds pretty cool but to non chemist eyes it looks like a little beaker and i think its cute

  • @ivy_47
    @ivy_47 2 года назад +1

    Lol at the shade against Explosions & Fire for Cubane.

  • @davidreznick9902
    @davidreznick9902 2 года назад +6

    I'm surprised you don't have octaoxygen (red oxygen), that is like cubane on steroids!

    • @That_Chemist
      @That_Chemist  2 года назад +1

      That one could go in the cursed inorganic tierlist

    • @davidreznick9902
      @davidreznick9902 2 года назад

      @@00bean00 very true, but black nitrogen is pretty neat too

  • @Seorful
    @Seorful 2 года назад +6

    The most cursed one in my opinion is hexaphenylethan. I dont know why but just looking at it causes me to shiver in fear.

  • @sameichorn3757
    @sameichorn3757 Год назад

    how have i not found this channel sooner. These are all amazing :D

  • @foc2241
    @foc2241 2 года назад +2

    16:33 Oi stop mocking poor Tom 😂😂😂

  • @zzzanzitron7536
    @zzzanzitron7536 2 года назад +4

    Enediynes are amongst the most interesting molecules I've read about due to their reactions. There are natural enediynes synthesized by some microorganisms that act as toxins that kill competitors by directly cleaving DNA with biradicals. Whilst I am still skeptical of the claims of their antitumor properties, I definitely think they should be given more attention in microbiology and pharmacology.

  • @daskut.
    @daskut. 2 года назад +3

    I just watched a molecules tier list... and I love it

  • @bazooka93
    @bazooka93 2 года назад +2

    So many exotic looking molecules I'd never have a contact with. And then there's metformin, something I dispensed tens of thousands doses of.

  • @RyanLynch1
    @RyanLynch1 2 года назад +1

    8:14 😂 didn't expect you to want to taste it. a true scientist!!!

  • @1.4142
    @1.4142 2 года назад +3

    Nice to see that this already has more subs than the old channel

  • @snakebite1033
    @snakebite1033 2 года назад +6

    I hat to synthesise an Allene as a part of a undergrad lab course, with 3 other students given similar analogues. Even though the synthesis failed for all four it was because of the old, almost completely air oxidised wittig precursor. So instead we hab to hydrolise a Alleen containing ester, which tolerated 4 hours of reflux in 50% Ethanol/Water with NaOH quite well. The alleen for me was 2-benzyl-5,5-dimethylhexa-2,3-dienoic acid hzdrolised from the corresponding ethyl ester.
    For the synthesis it was intended to react an acid chloride with stable wittig reagent and according to the supervisor it was usually successful with yields around 50%.

  • @enesince6329
    @enesince6329 2 года назад +1

    Nice video. I feel like Cubane is the first cursed molecule we get to know as an undergrad :D

  • @aureliaselvans8792
    @aureliaselvans8792 2 года назад +1

    Your channel was recommended and I gotta say, I have no idea what the hell you are saying, but I'm hooked.

  • @tarot1136
    @tarot1136 2 года назад +10

    I would love an inorganic cursed molecules tier list !

  • @NetRolller3D
    @NetRolller3D 2 года назад +3

    If someone synthesized an allene from lignin, would that be called a woody allene?

  • @MysteryKar
    @MysteryKar 2 года назад +2

    "teletubbie nomenclature" is something i never want to hear ever again

  • @carterhrabrick8584
    @carterhrabrick8584 2 года назад +2

    Idky, but as a non-chemist “this will trigger you, if you are… like most people” really sent me

  • @Speederzzz
    @Speederzzz 2 года назад +8

    I'm also suprised you showed Catananes and not Rotaxanes or Molecular knots. Olympiadane is ofcourse the most cursed of the catenanes I know.

  • @dakshanbalaramesh
    @dakshanbalaramesh 2 года назад +4

    How about Adamanzane? It is one of the most visually cursed compounds I've ever seen

  • @rowanlove1752
    @rowanlove1752 2 года назад +2

    16:30 I can't believe you savaged Tom like that

  • @pelegsap
    @pelegsap 2 года назад +1

    Carborane looks like something out of an alchemist's fever dream

  • @teafanatic8452
    @teafanatic8452 Год назад +3

    This channel gets put in T tier for me, not because your channel name begins with t or anything, simply because your content is terrific

  • @TheOpnor
    @TheOpnor 2 года назад +3

    SInce you mentioned ketenes and allenes, I would have been curious where you'd rate diazoalkenes :D

  • @mrpokemon1186
    @mrpokemon1186 2 года назад +2

    The Enediynes structure looks like a boomerang

  • @alexanderharrison7421
    @alexanderharrison7421 2 года назад +1

    16:33
    Love the Explosives and Fire nod

  • @Esterified80
    @Esterified80 2 года назад +3

    There's also paddlanes, fenesteranes, kekulenes, polyynes ,halonium ions, twistane and asterane and orthonitrates etc...

  • @Valdagast
    @Valdagast 2 года назад +3

    Explosions and Fire has also struggled with MCP.

  • @disruptivegarage
    @disruptivegarage Год назад +2

    i would love to see a cursed (bio)chemist workplace comments/questions

  • @AlvaroGC_2001
    @AlvaroGC_2001 2 года назад +2

    Hey you should do a tier list related to weird organometallic intermediates or compounds

  • @jmowreader9555
    @jmowreader9555 2 года назад +4

    How does a molecule become cursed?
    Having said that, methyl ethyl ketone peroxide probably falls into the cursed category.

  • @bemanos12345
    @bemanos12345 2 года назад +3

    Check out Harry Anderson's work (Oxford University), they have made a super cursed giant aromatic wheel and other similarly insane structures

    • @arya6085
      @arya6085 2 года назад +1

      Just googled him, that chemical looks insane! Did they actually make that?

    • @That_Chemist
      @That_Chemist  2 года назад

      pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/jacs.0c05033

  • @coreysayre1376
    @coreysayre1376 Год назад

    Big part of me wishes I had stuck with chemistry but the more I learned about big pharma the more I knew I wasn't going to be a part of it. I may have moved on to other trades but being able to live vicariously through the chemistry community on RUclips is awesome. Subscribed.
    PS that shade you threw st e&f/r&I was friggin hilarious. I imagine it's starting to warm up down under hopefully that'll keep him cool for the summer!

  • @DaftFader
    @DaftFader Год назад +1

    I liked for the Explosions and fire cubane synthesis dig near the end. :D

  • @iryanmadayana1904
    @iryanmadayana1904 2 года назад +8

    Yesss, my boi pentacyanocyclopentadiene! :D
    Another cool symmetric ring molecule is Sulflower. Essentially 8 thiophene rings fused side-to-side, forming a flowery ring. Also means the molecule has no hydrogen left. Not sure how cursed you would rate it, but it is definitely an aesthetically pleasing sight!

    • @That_Chemist
      @That_Chemist  2 года назад +1

      It’s a pretty cursed molecule

  • @matthannigan78
    @matthannigan78 2 года назад +12

    Squaric acid’s name 💯💯💯
    You’re correct that it doesn’t contain a carboxylic acid, but it is a double vinylogue of a carboxylic acid (i.e. a double vinylogous acid) meaning that there is a double bond between the OH and the carbonyl - very cool functionality.

  • @redacted_redacted_redacted
    @redacted_redacted_redacted 2 года назад +2

    I have almost no idea what is actually being discussed here, but it seems interesting

  • @consmi0
    @consmi0 2 года назад +2

    Look up Mobius Orbitals - essentially there's an excited state of a pi-conjugated system with only one node, each p-orbital is twisted slowly around the ring.

    • @shinyaltaria1388
      @shinyaltaria1388 2 года назад +6

      Why did I read it as morbius orbitals instead of mobius orbitals? I've been looking at too many memes, haven't I?

  • @talbotron22
    @talbotron22 2 года назад +3

    Not only have I prepared allenes, I have prepared iodo-allenes (via SN2' displacement of the precursor propargyl alcohol with HI/CuI). Somehow, allenyl-X is thermodynamically more stable than propargyl-X. This is not to say allenes are OK. They are not, they are terrible! I was trying to purify a low MW allenyl iodide via distillation (per a lit method) and it exploded the first time I tried. The next time I modified to distill under reduced pressure, and it exploded again. Finally, I distilled 1) under pressure and 2) from dodecane so that it never went dry. At last, no explosion. 0/5 do not recommend allenes.