Instructional Video2:39
MinuteEarth

Why The Ocean Needs Salt

12th - Higher Ed
Our oceans don’t technically contain salt, but the ions salt is made of play a critical role in planet-wide processes that make the Earth habitable.
Instructional Video17:31
SciShow

Building New Molecules: SciShow Talk Show

12th - Higher Ed
Hank and PhD candidate Casey Massena go deep into the chemistry of a molecule that Casey helped create! Then Jessi joins the show to show off Ecuador, one of her many conures!
Instructional Video1:18
Curated Video

How to Make Ionic Compounds

9th - Higher Ed
Howcast - Ionic compounds consist of two or more ions held together by electrical attraction. Ions with a positive charge are called cations while ions with a negative charge are called anions.
Instructional Video1:32
Curated Video

Why do covalent compounds share electrons?

9th - Higher Ed
A covalent compound forms when electrons are shared and this will happen when you have 2 nonmetals, or 2 anions, bonding together. The reason these elements share their electrons is because they have a small difference in...
Instructional Video3:57
Curated Video

Naming Covalent Compounds the EASY way | How to pass Chemistry

9th - Higher Ed
This videos will cover how to name covalent compounds. It is important to remember that we have to use prefixes when we name covalent compounds. Covalent bonds, or compounds, form between 2 nonmetals, or 2 anions. In a covalent bond the...
Instructional Video2:59
Curated Video

Understanding Frenkel Defects

9th - Higher Ed
Switching Locations: Understanding Frenkel Defects In the event that an ion is absent from its lattice site, resulting in a vacancy or a hole in that location, and it occupies an interstitial site, the compound will be able to maintain...
Instructional Video2:26
Curated Video

Anion Vacancies and F Centres in Metal Excess Defects

9th - Higher Ed
The formation of F-centers in a crystal is caused by the presence of anion vacancies, which are caused by the presence of metal excess defects. Alkali metal halides, such as sodium chloride and potassium chloride, are examples of...
Instructional Video1:52
Curated Video

Cations and Anions Explained - What's the difference?!

9th - Higher Ed
Ions are all around you and in many of the products and substances you encounter on a daily basis. Being able to determine the identity and difference between cations and anions is important for success in chemistry and physical science....
Instructional Video2:44
Curated Video

Exploring Crystalline and Ionic Solids

9th - Higher Ed
Exploring Crystalline Ionic Solids. Crystalline solids have a regular internal arrangement of particles, a long range order, and sharp melting points. They are hard and rigid, with a characteristic heat of fusion. They are anisotropic,...
Instructional Video3:20
Curated Video

The Schottky defect and its consequences

9th - Higher Ed
The Schottky defect and its consequences Ionic crystals of type A B exhibit a Schottky defect, where an equal number of anions and cations are absent from lattice sites to maintain electrical neutrality. This defect is present in highly...
Instructional Video1:52
Curated Video

Ionic Bonds: Chemistry’s Magnetic Attractions

9th - Higher Ed
Ionic bonds form due to the electrostatic attraction between positively charged cations and negatively charged anions, often resulting in crystalline solids
Instructional Video4:30
Curated Video

Why does chemistry happen?! Element Stability and the Octet Rule!

9th - Higher Ed
Why does chemistry happen?? Why do ions form?? Why do elements bond together?? These are all important questions and the answer comes back to one very important principle in chemistry and that is element stability. Elements are stable...
Instructional Video2:15
Curated Video

4 Things to Know to Pass Chemistry

9th - Higher Ed
Chemistry is a class that most students will have to take in order to pass chemistry and graduate from high school. In this video, we go over 4 things that you must know in order to pass chemistry! Topic 1: Atomic Structure Topic 2: Atom...
Instructional Video13:19
Catalyst University

Theory of Thermodynamic Activity and Ionic Strength

Higher Ed
Theory of Thermodynamic Activity and Ionic Strength
Instructional Video10:23
Catalyst University

What is Lactate and Lactic Acid?

Higher Ed
In this video, we discuss how lactate is formed in skeletal muscle and under what conditions such as high-intensity exercise. Also, we will dispel some misconceptions regarding lactate.
Instructional Video14:13
Schooling Online

Chemistry Properties and Structure of Matter: Properties of Matter - Naming Binary Ionic compounds

3rd - Higher Ed
This lesson will reveal the rules for writing the names and chemical formulae of ionic compounds, by balancing charges and using the cross method. Definitions included: ionic compound, binary ionic compound, oxidation state
Instructional Video9:03
Curated Video

Electrolysis of Aqueous Copper Sulfates

Higher Ed
The video is a lecture presentation on the electrolysis of aqueous copper sulfates. It begins with an explanation of what electrolysis is and what is in the aqueous solution of the metal salt. The presenter then goes on to make some...
Instructional Video5:08
Professor Dave Explains

Nomenclature of Oxyacids

12th - Higher Ed
We gotta know how to name all the molecules, and oxyacids are a type of molecule, so let's learn how to name them!
Instructional Video7:16
Professor Dave Explains

What Are Electrolytes?

12th - Higher Ed
People throw around the term "electrolyte" quite a bit, but what does it mean? What makes something a strong electrolyte, a weak electrolyte, or a nonelectrolyte? let's find out!
Instructional Video3:57
FuseSchool

Electrolysis of Water & Hydrochloric Acid

6th - Higher Ed
The discovery that passing an electric current through water would split it apart was made quite soon after the discovery of current electricity itself. This predates Michael Faraday’s work in this area, but it is he who introduced most...
Instructional Video32:29
msvgo

Ionization of Acids and Bases

K - 12th
It explains the ionisation of acids and bases. It explains the term conjugate acids and bases. It derives the expression to calculate ionic product of water.
Instructional Video11:50
Schooling Online

Chemistry Properties and Structure of Matter: Properties of Matter - Naming Polyatomic Ions

3rd - Higher Ed
This lesson will uncover the rules for writing the names and chemical formulae of polyatomic ions and ionic compounds. Definitions included: monoatomic ion, polyatomic ion
Instructional Video4:03
Mazz Media

Naming Ionic Compounds

6th - 8th
This video begins with an example of a simple ionic compound, salt, showing a model and then its chemical name. The video continues with an example of a divalent metal and discusses the oxidation number of the elements in these compounds...
Instructional Video2:45
Learning Games Lab

Properties of Soil

9th - 12th Standards
How do the different types of soil allow water to flow? Scholars compare flocculated and dispersed soils and their ability to move water through the soil. Silt, sand, and clay particles clump together and create large pores in the soil...