PreparED Study Materials

MOL BIO 1: General Chemistry

School: University of California - Irvine

Number of Notes and Study Guides Available: 2

Notes

Videos

Stars

Want To Learn More? To watch the entire video and ALL of the videos in the series:

Add to cart

Electronegativity & Acid Strength: Decoding Acid Formulas
Stars

Want To Learn More? To watch the entire video and ALL of the videos in the series:

Add to cart

This video discusses how the electronegativity of attached groups affects the strength of acids. Comparing pairs such as Chloroacetic vs Fluoroacetic and Acetic vs Nitroacetic acids, we highlight which is the stronger acid in each pair and why.

Drawing the Lewis Structure for Glycine: The Protein Building Block
Stars

Want To Learn More? To watch the entire video and ALL of the videos in the series:

Add to cart

Discover how amino acids, specifically glycine, form the foundation of proteins. Understand and visualize the Lewis structure representation of glycine. Grasp the significance of atomic bonding and electron distribution.

Why is Chloromethane Polar but Methane Nonpolar? Decoding Molecule Sha
Stars

Want To Learn More? To watch the entire video and ALL of the videos in the series:

Add to cart

Explore the polar nature of Chloromethane and the nonpolar characteristics of Methane. Understand the impact of electronegativity differences and bond types. Deciphering molecular polarity through the lens of tetrahedral structures.

Vaporization vs. Condensation: Heat Absorption & Release
Stars

Want To Learn More? To watch the entire video and ALL of the videos in the series:

Add to cart

Discover the contrasting processes of vaporization and condensation and their thermal nature. Understand why boiling is endothermic, absorbing heat, while condensation is exothermic, releasing heat, and how these processes impact ?H values.

Finding NaOH Molarity: Titration of 0.200L SO?-Derived H?SO? Solution
Stars

Want To Learn More? To watch the entire video and ALL of the videos in the series:

Add to cart

Determine the molarity of a NaOH solution through titration with sulfurous acid. Starting with the ideal gas equation we derive the concentration of a 0.200L SO?-derived H?SO? solution. Concluding with a molarity of 1.64 M for NaOH using calculated values.

Textbook Solutions (0)

Top Selling Study Tools

×

Login

Login or Sign up for access to all of our study tools and educational content!

Forgot password?
Register Now

×

Register

Sign up for access to all content on our site!

Or login if you already have an account

×

Reset password

If you have an active account we’ll send you an e-mail for password recovery

Or login if you have your password back