Crash Course Chemistry - Season 1 Episode 7 Water and Solutions -- for Dirty Laundry
Dihydrogen monoxide (better know as water) is the key to nearly everything. It falls from the sky, makes up 60% of our bodies, and just about every chemical process related to life takes place with it or in it. Without it, none of the chemical reactions that keep us alive would happen - none of the reactions that sustain any life form on earth would happen - and the majority of inorganic chemical reactions that shape the surface of the earth would not happen either. Every one of us uses water for all kinds of chemistry every day - our body chemistry, our food chemistry and our laundry chemistry all take place in water. In today's Crash Course Chemistry, we use Hank's actual dirty laundry (ew) to learn about some of the properties of water that make it so special - it's polarity and dielectric property; how electrolytes can be used to classify solutions; and we discover how to calculate a solution's molarity as well as how to dilute a solution using the dilution equation.
Year: 2014
Genre: Documentary
Country: United States of America
Studio: YouTube
Director:
Cast: Hank Green
Crew:
First Air Date: Feb 04, 2013
Last Air date: Jan 13, 2014
Season: 1 Season
Episode: 46 Episode
Runtime: 11 minutes
IMDb: 2.00/10 by 1.00 users
Popularity: 3.481
Language: English
Episode
The Nucleus
Unit Conversion & Significant Figures
The Creation of Chemistry - The Fundamental Laws
The Periodic Table
The Electron
Stoichiometry: Chemistry for Massive Creatures
Water and Solutions -- for Dirty Laundry
Acid-Base Reactions in Solution
Precipitation Reactions
Redox Reactions
How To Speak Chemistrian
The Ideal Gas Law
Ideal Gas Problems
Real Gases
Partial Pressures & Vapor Pressure
Passing Gases: Effusion, Diffusion and the Velocity of a Gas
Energy & Chemistry
Enthalpy
Calorimetry
Entropy: Embrace the Chaos!
Lab Techniques & Safety
Atomic Hook-Ups - Types of Chemical Bonds
Polar & Non-Polar Molecules
Bonding Models and Lewis Structures
Orbitals
Liquids
Solutions
Equilibrium
Equilibrium Equations
pH and pOH
Buffers, the Acid Rain Slayer
Kinetics: Chemistry's Demolition Derby
Doing Solids
Network Solids and Carbon
Silicon - The Internet's Favorite Element
Electrochemistry
The History of Atomic Chemistry
Nuclear Chemistry
Nuclear Chemistry Part 2: Fusion and Fission
Hydrocarbon Power!
Alkenes & Alkynes
Aromatics and Cyclic Compounds
Hydrocarbon Derivatives
Nomenclature
Polymers
The Global Carbon Cycle