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02:00 - 15:0015:00 - 00:00

15:02
@Rubisco Could you help me? You are a polymer also...
No I'm not
I'm just big.
Yes you are
you are formed from condensation polymerization
from amino acids
It's rude calling people polymers, dude.
I can flag that as offensive.
...??? :o
now seriously, could you help me?
1. is quartz a polymer?
2. is NaCl a polymer?
@pentavalentcarbon what about you?
Nope, none of them are what I'd call a polymer.
15:05
@Rubisco why not?
Their unit is not a molecule.
Polymers must be covalent?
Nah, not like that
I don't call ionic stuff molecules...
I mean, the mental image of a polymer in my mind consists of units larger than, say, 5 atoms.
15:08
@Rubisco ethyne polymer?
Molecules do not have any mind!
:D
A polymer (/ˈpɒlᵻmər/; Greek poly-, "many" + -mer, "parts") is a large molecule, or macromolecule, composed of many repeated subunits. Because of their broad range of properties, both synthetic and natural polymers play an essential and ubiquitous role in everyday life. Polymers range from familiar synthetic plastics such as polystyrene to natural biopolymers such as DNA and proteins that are fundamental to biological structure and function. Polymers, both natural and synthetic, are created via polymerization of many small molecules, known as monomers. Their consequently large molecular mass relative...
@Wildcat That's what you scientists think.
The seal is back
@Wildcat @Rubisco this one talks!
15:10
:O
@Rubisco I have another question
I'm listening
how would you convert α-butylene to β-butylene?
@DHMO What is the material you can use?
@Rubisco any
except β-butylene for obvious reasons
(it may not have an answer)
15:19
Back
@Rubisco You might need to call your brothers for this one...
What?
user116211
@Rubisco H-bar is the Jedi Council.
@Rubisco I meant enzymes...
I was just kidding, you may continue with your conversion
What was the question again?
15:21
how would you convert α-butylene to β-butylene?
Hmm, well, I guess you first hydrogenate it . . .
@Rubisco is there a possible one-step reaction?
Or maybe a basic or acidic catalyst would do.
@DHMO Prolly.
I have a three-step pathway already:
α-butylene --1--> sec-butyl chloride --2--> sec-butyl alcohol --3--> β-butylene
1. HCl
2. NaOH (aq)
3. H2SO4 (l)
15:25
@Rubisco my god
Your God
his god
It seems KNH2, Pd, or Alumina are good catalysts.
@Rubisco how do they work?
hogging the β-hydrogen to form a carbocation and then rearrangement?
I'm looking for the mechanism.
15:31
yield 57.2%....
nothing
@Rubisco so complicated...
0
Q: Why is (NH4)2[CuCl4] square planar complex but Cs2[CuCl4] is tetrahedral?

ZOZWhy is $\ce{(NH4)2[CuCl4]}$ square planar complex but $\ce{Cs2[CuCl4]}$ is tetrahedral even though both have same oxidation number of copper and same ligands?

15:40
@DHMO Well, it doesn't seem to be, since I understand the mechanism.
@Rubisco could you explain it?
@DHMO The metal grabs one hydrogen, then the olefin comes. Then the metal-hydrogen thing grabs on to one of the hydrogens of the metal, and then the metal let's go of the first hydrogen it grabbed.
It's like cheating on your girlfriend.
If you were rhodium.
And you're girlfriend was 20 times smaller.
@Rubisco alright
16:01
Oh, @Martin . . . You don't have the slightest idea how much of you this chat needs these days.
0
Q: Determining central atom in benzene structure

AlfonsoI've been trying to find a central atom that matches a benzene molecule (or a similar one) but the valences don´t work. In other words, I would like to get a molecule of 13 atoms based on that of the benzene (XC6H6). It may not even be a hydrocarbon. Thanks in advance. Greetings from Peru.

@Rubisco How am I supposed to react to this?
Mmmm... My answer is accepted! :)
@Wildcat it is of quality
@DHMO vigorously, releasing three moles of gas
CH3+ + 3 CH4 → (CH3)3C+ + 3H2
@Rubisco don't know if it is vigorous though
16:12
@Rubisco XD
@DHMO It is for one mole of water
”for theoretical discoveries of topological phase transitions and topological phases of matter”
OK then. XD
Mmmm.... Pretzel... :)
Sounds legit to me: "Math processing error means for every object of math processing error, if math processing error belongs to the empty set, then math processing error also belongs to the set A." What exactly is the problem here?" — Rubisco 23 secs ago
16:31
@DHMO please also link to the HW policy when commenting on HW crap.
17:23
:O
17:52
How do we call it if a protein's absorbance curve has a maximum, a minimum, and another localized maximum (a slight upward tendency in the curve). How would we call this "shoulder" in the curve?
@CowperKettle I think it's just called a shoulder.
@pentavalentcarbon ah, great
I thought it was a Russian expression
I was trying to search for "shoulder chart" but got the moronic technical analysis (stock market) pages
 
2 hours later…
19:36
0
Q: Why can 5s, 5p and 5d be put together?

Arleigh spackmanThe numbers are the same but the orbital notations are different. My teacher tried to explain it to me but she didn't know how. PLEASE HELP!!!!!!

Hmmm...
PLEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEASE YOUR SAVING LIVES
@Rubisco WHAT?! :O
20:06
This question has got already four close votes before it entered the review.
The all-caps title might have helped.
20:51
@Loong it always "helps"! :D
@Loong Any form of publicity is good publicity.
21:14
@Loong frankly I'm very much surprised that you didn't answer the questionnaire sooner than me.
@Rubisco I am working on it; maybe I can finish tomorrow. I will read your answers after I have posted mine.
To the degree that I thought I'm doing something wrong by posting.
I double-checked the thread to make sure I should be posting answers.
Hehe, I was looking at this page to see what I should do: meta.physics.stackexchange.com/questions/9196/…
21:54
@ringo gone
Good work team! Bagged another one!
22:24
what does the "n" in n-butane mean?
@DHMO it's the n word.
5
Q: What is the meaning of n in n-octane and similar compounds?

Mörre NoseshineStraight-chain octane ($\ce{CH3(CH2)6CH3}$) is also called n-octane. What does the n stand for, and where did the term originate?

@Loong thanks, that's a huge discrimination
23:20
what are the analogues of Si and SiO2 in the ionic world in terms of structure?
What do you mean by that?
@pentavalentcarbon which ionic crystal has SiO2 structure?
@DHMO You might not like this answer
Silicon dioxide, also known as silica (from the Latin silex), is a chemical compound that is an oxide of silicon with the chemical formula SiO2. It has been known since ancient times. Silica is most commonly found in nature as quartz, as well as in various living organisms. In many parts of the world, silica is the major constituent of sand. Silica is one of the most complex and most abundant families of materials, existing both as several minerals and being produced synthetically. Notable examples include fused quartz, crystal, fumed silica, silica gel, and aerogels. Applications range fro...
What you should do
is go down to the part that says "Crystalline forms"
and read to your heart's content
because chemistry pages on Wikipedia tend to be good as a "gateway drug" for following one topic to another.
@pentavalentcarbon thanks methanium
23:35
I'M NOT METHANIUM DANGIT
I have no charge, I'm a radical
:(
@DHMO Honestly, I think more of your time should be spent reading. Then, when you ask questions, you'll understand the answers better and you'll ask better questions.
(wish I knew that in high school...)
nice advice
POLL:
A. *sec*-butyl
B. 1-methylpropyl
C. but-2-yl
D. butan-2-yl
02:00 - 15:0015:00 - 00:00

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