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13:03
you can do it
How? With a pure heart?
It's official. The treatment for depression is "Things I won't work with"
ALERT THE MEDIA!
@M.A.Ramezani And MAGIC!
he @BreakingBioinformatics is this colourful enough chemistry.stackexchange.com/questions/18524/…?
13:04
No no! Don't upvote it!
lol
teehee
I'm a nice person @santiago
you are indeed!
Did you get your badge now?
@M.A.Ramezani is trying to steal our cookies
13:07
NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO‌​OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!
@BreakingBioinformatics not yet, but it'll come
@M.A.Ramezani lol
hands @M.A.Ramezani a paper bag BREATHE.
HEY! don't eat the paper bag!
lol
neeeeeeeeeeeeccccccccccccccccccccccccccccromancer! oh yeah oh yeah
13:10
you love it
@santiago has violated the Fifth Law of Magic.
again?
> Robots can't love.
?
damn... the world has gone mad - a beheading in France, a shootout killing 27 in Tunisia and a bombing in a Kuwaiti Mosque
13:12
@santiago That's because you got the necromancer.
@M.A.Ramezani Indeed.
that escalated quickly
This. Is. Only. The. Beginning. MWAHAHHAHAHHAHHAHHAHHHAHHAHAHHHA etc.
darn right
so, @M.A.Ramezani you gonna get your necromancer?
13:15
Darn right I am$\ldots$ IF I find a question.
@BreakingBioinformatics Yeah$\ldots$ That was a nice student of mine.
would you like us to select a question for you?
Incidentally, what is $\ldots$ supposed to do?
5 downvotes in 10 seconds.
Yeah.
@BreakingBioinformatics It's the correct form of showing ellipsis.
... isn't correct.
It should have some spaces in between.
@M.A.Ramezani I actually see "ldots" in between "$"
13:18
Then turn MathJax on!
I see MathJax on the actual Q and A site.
But not on here.
You should turn it on here.
It's not on by default, in any of the SE chatrooms.
Copy the code in @Martin's answer. Make a bookmark.
And then drag the bookmark to the tab.
When I try to make a bookmark.
It says to define the messages that start and end the conversation I want to bookmark
13:22
Wut?
@BreakingBioinformatics No no! Bookmark as in the browser's bookmark.
That's bookmarking a conversation in chat.
Oh.
Let me see if that worked.
$\ldots$
Nope.
Let me check now $\ldots$
No.
Did you drag the bookmark to the browser tab?
It won't drag at all.
Click and hold the mouse on the bookmark, then drag it to the tab.
Notice that ChatJax bookmarklet I've made.
I drag it to the tab. Let me see if I can make a screenie.
Did that.
Let me try one more time now.
$\ldots$
13:28
$\heartsuit$
O.o
What code do you use?
What do you mean?
Did you copy the code in @Martin's answer?
13:30
(BTW I'm totally making him get that publicist badge)
@BreakingBioinformatics Then pasted it in as a bookmark address?
Then I clicked and dragged it from the book mark bar thingie into the tab.
Hullo @Get!
13:32
@BreakingBioinformatics And released the mouse?
Long time no see..everyone.
Yeah.
What's up?
HI @getafix! @M.A.Ramezani has been inconsolable in your absence!
Sorry guyz I had to attend an experiment so didn't able to answer all '???????'s
13:33
@M.A.Ramezani The radial direction that points outward from the Earth's center of gravity.
Was I consolable when he (?) was present?
@santiago Hahaha. @M.A.Ramezani: fair point.
@M.A.Ramezani I'm just stuck on this concept.
What concept?
Any one could help would be great.
13:35
@santiago really likes to help you.
about the question I asked @M.A.Ramezani
@diffracteD What is it?
should I through it again.. !!
2
Q: Electronic density distribution in hydrogen bond

diffracteDI'm currently studying about the atomic configuration of electrostatic interactions. Concept is there that in case of interactions like in N-H...N-H (amides), the stability depends on the position of resonating electron between H...N nuclei (THE NATURE OF THE CHEMICAL BOND. II. THE ONE-ELECTRON B...

13:36
That's too much scrolling up @dif.
here it is...
Well, what is your exact question?
@dif I don't know if any of the guys currently here can help with DFT calculations.
Would love to weigh in, but i can't lol
But about the hydrogen bond concept, I think we can have our shot.
13:41
any concept regarding 'electronic resonance w.r.t. atomic geometry' from the electronic density distribution's point of view
@M.A.Ramezani go ahead.
I can use anything...
> Because water forms hydrogen bonds with the donors and acceptors on solutes dissolved within it, it inhibits the formation of a hydrogen bond between two molecules of those solutes or the formation of intramolecular hydrogen bonds within those solutes through competition for their donors and acceptors.
> Consequently, hydrogen bonds between or within solute molecules dissolved in water are almost always unfavorable relative to hydrogen bonds between water and the donors and acceptors for hydrogen bonds on those solutes. Hydrogen bonds between water molecules have a duration of about 10−10 seconds.
lemurs
> Hydrogen bonding strongly affects the crystal structure of ice, helping to create an open hexagonal lattice. The density of ice is less than the density of water at the same temperature; thus, the solid phase of water floats on the liquid, unlike most other substances.
@santiago What? They have hydrogen bonding too?
yes, yes they do
Ah man. Serious discussions in two chatrooms. Slap me! Quick! Before it's too late.
13:46
slaps @M.A.Ramezani and stretches him out on the tiles
Any of that info helps? @Dif?
@BreakingBioinformatics Thanks.
slaps @M.A.Ramezani with a rubber chicken
@santiago Mine was better.
I have a real quick question, one of our lab instructors asked as to determine the pKa of HCl based on the titration curve we drew out, and I don't really know what to do (end of a 12-hour work day..my brain is half dead). any help would be appreciated.
Can you give some screenshot or what of the titration curve?
13:49
lol
Sure thing. haha
@Dif I read your question. I agree it's vague.\
The electron between two nuclei?!
@BreakingBioinformatics i think @M.A.Ramezani likes being slapped
Hydrogen bonds occur because there's some interesting negative charge on one electronegative atom and there's a little concentration of positive charge.
@santiago I do. Specially if your hand's wet with cold water.
CREEPY!
13:52
throws snowballs at @M.A.Ramezani
probably not the best..meah.
what I tried to mean is the electron density shared by H nuclei and O nuclei to form the H bond @M.A.Ramezani
throws @BreakingBioinformatics at @M.A.Ramezani
@getafix How many millileters of that does it take for a pH =7?
Plug it in the formula.
@diffracteD They don't form the H bond!
13:54
uses a judo move to throw @santiago into @M.A.Ramezani instead
H bond is like this: OH . . . H.
The three dots (I should've used LaTeX) are the H bond.
that was fun
There's no electron cloud shared between the H on the right and the O bonded with another H!
wheeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee
@M.A.Ramezani: How does the pKa relate to the equivalence point? From this plot, 10,0 mL of titrant; I also plotted the first derivative vs vol and found eqv. at 9.9 mL.
13:56
yes, the HO...H are supposed to share a single electron resonance. Isn't it ! @M.A.Ramezani
@diffracteD No! That's not what I thought.
That just can't be true.
There's no electron sharing. This is an intermolecular force!
13:57
ketchup
force of what ! there must be an electronic density sharing to generate the 'force' as I think @M.A.Ramezani
I'm fighting with four people here.
@diffracteD No. The force is an electrostatic attraction.
@santiago: Lemm me see what is ketchup
Obviously I don't know it
@M.A.Ramezani
I'll be silent for few minutes
So one is reduced
yeah! but an electrostatic interaction must share some electronic orbitals otherwise how the interaction gonna happen if there is no sharing @M.A.Ramezani
See @dif, it happens because O takes away the H on the left's electron most of the time. That gives it a considerable amount of negative charge.
13:59
@M.A.Ramezani Yes, there is electron density in hydrogen bond @diffracteD is right
You have to deal with 3
Oh, there is? Tell me more @Mith.
@Onthewaytosuccess I suggest reading the transcript. I only have 10 fingers to type with.
8 fingers and 2 thumbs, you mutant
ooooookay @M.A.Ramezani
@santiago Hush! There's another room for X men.
14:02
lol
I have one quiz, I'll ask it later
Ask it now. I'm hot.
@M.A.Ramezani: Help me first. :( You make me sad.
Hey I forgot about you.
What was the titrant?
What was the question?
14:03
KOH
Ya help him first
@M.A.Ramezani what colour raincoat should I get?
@getafix afaik pKa of HCl is impossible to be determined in aqueous solutions.
Few days ago i was on lecture about hydrogen bond in DFT and yes there is, but no electrstatic/resonance stuff won't explain it
And leave me a message when you done
right @M.A.Ramezani
14:03
Holy crud! My brain is exploding!
4
@PH13 I had a feeling too. like we know pKa<1 . but how do I put an exact number on it?
@Mithoron Yes. I was thinking @dif is gonna run into trouble explaining stuff with that.
It seems he mixes it up with MOs. Or what.
@getafix How precise do you need to be?
@Mith I want to relate resonance with atomic configurations responsible with H bond formation. @M.A.Ramezani
@M.A.Ramezani: I haven't the slighteset idea..the lab instructions are as vague as vague can be.
14:06
Toss me an idea..any idea.
Be vague and take the pKa as 0.
tosses @getafix an idea
Fight fire with fire!
Haha. too bad my work is graded.. I don't think i can afford to be cheeky.
14:08
oh my dog! Grades again !
I know. That's why I say that.
Titration of NaOH and any acid with phenolphthalein and methyl orange as indicator
They usually don't dig that deep.
agreed ! @M.A.Ramezani
14:09
??????
?????????????????
And so on.
"they usually don't dig..."
what the heck out there to have different end points
???
?????
@Mith so you're saying in HO... H there's electron could distribution between the emboldened H and the emboldened O?
@diffracteD I know. But some question marks look beautiful on chat. Says @santiago.
@M.A.Ramezani Yeah, exactely, only weaker - it has some covalent character
@M.A.Ramezani: I need to relate it to my experimental results somehow, so if I say i pKa = 0 ..i need to justify why. I can't wrap my head around this lol.
14:11
@M.A.Ramezani darn tootin'
@Mithoron Oh, my gawd that's new to me.
@getafix Just say that it's so close to zero it's negligible.
here it is then. @santiago @M.A.Ramezani ????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????‌​?????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????? *n (where n = 0/1).
@M.A.Ramezani Treating H bond as electrostatic is strong simplification
@M.A.Ramezani: I get that, but like knowing my instructor, he would want me to point to some data or something to justify.
14:13
@getafix Then get a data!
@M.A.Ramezani: Hey are you done:
Kinda.
Throw me your question.
Are you quite sure
14:16
hey hw are you @Onthewaytosuccess
@diffracteD: Doing good
itration of NaOH and any acid with phenolphthalein and methyl orange as indicator,
I have an idea. I did compute my concentration of acid. I have the intial pH = [H+] Ka = [h30+][cl-]/[hcl]? does that work?
Isn't it ironic that I'm younger than all of you? I dunno why you guys are asking me your stuff. Your room/office's wall can answer better.
@diffracteD Only symmetric hydrogen/covalent bonds can be viewed with mesomeric structures if that's the resonances you think about
@getafix Yes.
14:17
I'll be silent for few min
@M.A.Ramezani: when did you start to learn chem
Like in F-...H+...F- - 3-center-4-electron bond
@Onthewaytosuccess Haha everyone goes silent with you.
boohaaahhhoaa
heyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy
@Mithoron so if I try to relate this resonating electron density with atomic geometry (atoms participating in H bond), how wild this would be !?
heya @Onthewaytosuccess
so what do you do @Onthewaytosuccess
dang it.. @M.A.Ramezani if i do that with the data i have, i get pKa 3.3 dang it!
14:23
@diffracteD: Umm.. I am a student
@Onthewaytosuccess do you have any specialization !
in which area
I like organc chem
ok, datz good to know @Onthewaytosuccess
@diffracteD High school students don't have any specialization. Except me of course. I'm an expert in chatting.
And I have a PhD in lolic chemistry, if you wondered.
@diffracteD : I am still in pre-university type environment
14:26
lolic?
!? @M.A.Ramezani
??????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????? what the heck is that lollic
Haha I got you guys confused.
lol chemistry
huh
isn't it
@M.A.Ramezani
@santiago will explain.
Runs away
14:27
Who
due to M.A.Ramezani forbear @M.A.Ramezani
I am not gonna tell you what branch of chemistry lolic chemistry is.
so you guys don't answer my quiz ,huh..
@Onthewaytosuccess What quiz?
You didn't even give us the question.
nt a quiz,
a confusion
Titration of NaOH and any acid with phenolphthalein and methyl orange as indicator
what is the difference out there
??
^I don't understand..
What do you mean by difference?
you'll get two different end points, for them
why is that
for same quantity of naoh and hcl
^How different?
Oh, you mean equivalence points?
14:32
equivalnce point =/= end point
Oh, yeah.
That's because you have two indicators.
equivalnce point = end point
@Onthewaytosuccess No it isn't.
@M.A.Ramezani: why
14:33
equivalence point is related to the end point, but it is not the same.
there should bre a reason
Equivalence point is when there are the same amounts of acid and base.
Yes. the equivalence point is when their is equal stoichiometric amounts of titrant and analyte
Of course, acids and bases that are similar.
14:34
Damn... I have admitted in incorrectly
end point is the point at which the indicator changes color.
ooooooooooooookkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkaaaaaaay
So, you have two indicators, you get two end points.
now let's jump back to the quiz
14:35
for monoprotic acids I'm 100 % sure that the endpoint is the same as the equivalence point
but how it can be , when their equivalence point is same @M.A.Ramezani
@PH13: what abt others
Was it HCl and NaOH?
@M.A.Ramezani: For moment let's take that
@Onthewaytosuccess "what abt others"?
@M.A.Ramezani You should make the LaTeX link stickied, like in the math room
14:37
Yeah.
@PH13: "what abt others"?, I mean other diprotic acids
My dinner time also getting close ,@M.A.Ramezani,@PH13
heylllllllllllllllllooooooooooooooo
hoooooooooooooo
@M.A.Ramezani,@PH13
room topic changed to The Periodic Table: Haikus are awesome / Chemistry is more so / pull up a chair ||| Want to turn MathJaX on? Try meta.chemistry.stackexchange.com/q/89/7448 [lolic-chemistry]
room topic changed to The Periodic Table: Haikus are awesome / Chemistry is more so / pull up a chair ||| Want to turn MathJaX on? Try [this](meta.chemistry.stackexchange.com/q/89/7448]. [lolic-chemistry]
@Onthewaytosuccess n-protic acids have n equivalence points and the n-th equivalence point is the endpoint
14:41
I wonder if it'll work.
exampless ,please.....?
@PH13 Correct.
hooooooiaaa
@M.A.Ramezani: I need few examples
@PH13 hey
oooooooooooops
can you explain what examples you want to have?
examples related to what I have asked
14:44
Like a diprotic acid?
I have to give a sight to it..,
Please do give.
what is to do give
@M.A.Ramezani: d u play cricket
it take long time bro
@M.A.Ramezani, @PH13, bbbbyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyeeeeeeeeeeeeeee, I am leaving
14:53
@Onthewaytosuccess bye
@Ont bye!
@Onthewaytosuccess No, cricket isn't that famous in Iran.
room topic changed to The Periodic Table: Haikus are awesome / Chemistry is more so / pull up a chair ||| Want to turn MathJaX on? Try meta.chemistry.stackexchange.com/q/89/7448. [lolic-chemistry]

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