You should definitely check out MAKiT's channel here: www.youtube.com/@MAKiTHappen In fact, you might see a chemistry-oriented video over there right now: kzbin.info/www/bejne/sInJioOtaKxnm6s You should also join the Scrap Science Discord server here: discord.gg/m76mHpvdGW
@Nighthawkinlight2 күн бұрын
Dang, I had a video very similar to this one on my to do list. Too many electrolysis videos out there (including my own) that don't explain how the end products end up at each electrode because the whole cell is talked about like it's only performing a single reaction. Understanding half reactions makes things much more interesting. Nice job on this.
@ScrapScience2 күн бұрын
Glad you liked it! And I definitely agree with your take - I love to see any and all electrolysis videos, but the fact that the redox process is happening in two independent half-reactions is one of the most interesting parts!
@vance735416 күн бұрын
I would love to see more theory vids like this!
@yehiaali38992 күн бұрын
I agree. I'm not really good with electrolysis so more of these videos would be so amazing❤.
@yehiaali38992 күн бұрын
"The worst copper plating you'll ever see" clearly you haven't met me, sir. 😂😂
@6alecapristrudelКүн бұрын
I really like that you're focusing on electrochem viedos and in general being someone that represents a less-popular branch of chemistry. It can get quite complicated and a good starting point is always important. You did a great job explaining a lot of fundamentals here. I see that you mostly do electrosynthesis, but I'd really love to see you do some metal plating videos. Seeing metal spawn out of seemingly nowhere never gets boring to me. They can help you to demonstrate some more concepts too, like diffusion and what happens when you turn up the current too high and "burn" your deposit. Additives and brighteners are a huge rabbit hole too.
@davidfetter2 күн бұрын
This absolutely whips! Those animations and your explanations played extremely well together. 10/10 would watch again.
@SosirisTseng2 күн бұрын
Thank you Scrap Science (and KZbin algorithm) for this informative video.
@pelegsap2 күн бұрын
This is a superb video. I learned this stuff back in undergrad 15+ years ago, and it was really good to get a refresher. Was interesting and well presented through and through. Thank you!
@ScrapScience2 күн бұрын
Thanks! Glad you enjoyed. You have one of my favourite profile pictures, by the way.
@suwedo86772 күн бұрын
Sincerely thank you for your work, you explained most of the things I couldn't wrap my head around when it comes to the direction of electrons and such. Please continue making in-depth videos about electrolysis, information is so scarce when it comes to this subject, it would really help a lot of people I think
@johnslugger2 күн бұрын
*Now make Nitro-Glycerin using only electrodes, Sodium Chloride, Sodium Nitrate and Vegetable Oil. I can. Next make electric Aspirin and next make Electric Morphine.*
@tsraikage2 күн бұрын
absolutely the best. sometimes youtubers ignore the fact that big part of viewers have no or too little understanding of the basics of what the videos are about. this was perfectly portioned and assembled video for well digestion. great job
@jaredhaas14289 сағат бұрын
Thanks for making this! Your explanations were easy to digest. I'd love to see more content like this too.
@mcwolfbeast2 күн бұрын
Thank you for providing a solid basis for people to understand electrolysis! I'm sure it will help many people become more educated in electrochemistry that would otherwise never gain that knowledge!
@Drjtherrien2 күн бұрын
This is a really nice explanation. I appreciate your use of analogies. My PhD thesis work was on electrochemical etching of silicon to make nanoparticles, so I appreciate just how deep one can go down this rabbit hole.
@ZoonCrypticon2 күн бұрын
A great video-tutorial, thank you !
@olimp23116 сағат бұрын
Thank you for the video. It was very informative
@davidliddelow57042 күн бұрын
This video was very helpful and concise. I feel like i have a good working knowledge of electrochemistry now.
@theodorekorehonen2 күн бұрын
This was great! Can't say that I understood everything but learning through abstraction takes actual study for me rather than just watching a video. I did learn though and this gives me material for my next wiki binge!
@theodorekorehonen2 күн бұрын
And by all means, more theory is great. I'd love to see some demonstrations to go along as for me personally I learn much better that way. Thanks for putting all this out there! Electrochemistry has always been fascinating to me!
@exo-58020 сағат бұрын
i like your video and now you have earned a new subscriber who likes chemistry!
@mikeconnery46522 күн бұрын
Excellent video
@rodrigomack132 күн бұрын
More of these would be really appreciated. My personal feeling is that practical applications of electrochemistry to other branches will be the future, but i don't know that much electrochemistry and no one seems to teach it here!
@brothertyler2 күн бұрын
Very well done my brother in Christ
@joideegacoizeega83292 күн бұрын
YES FINALLY
@FAT642 күн бұрын
Great video! Been curious what electrolysis is, feel like this is giving me a good foundation. Thank you!
@tjhouston49162 күн бұрын
Great video
@izzybarwick15212 күн бұрын
If Scrap Science has a million fans, then I am one of them. If Scrap Science has ten fans, then I am one of them. If Scrap Science has only one fan then that is me. If Scrap Science has no fans, then that means I am no longer on earth. If the world is against Scrap Science, then I am against the world.
@adityabhatnagar76202 күн бұрын
Very good and intresting video ❤
@Scrogan2 күн бұрын
Excellent video. I want to forward this to a Minecraft modder so he can make multiblock electrolytic and electrochemical cells for a tech modpack. I’m sick and tired of boring one-block GUI-based batteries and machines.
@ScrapScience2 күн бұрын
Haha! I'd love to see that.
@cipaisone2 күн бұрын
3:40, what happens judging from the color is more like copper oxidation, rather than water oxidation
@ScrapScience2 күн бұрын
I mean yeah, both are happening in that case.
@cipaisone2 күн бұрын
@ 🤓
@kreynolds11232 күн бұрын
Look into modeling electrolisys with electronic circuit elements. In short. Electrolisys can be modeled with a resistor followed by an ideal zener diode with a 1.24v forward voltage drop, wired in series after the resistor. The power then resistor consumes makes heat. The power the zener diode consumes splits water. Annidwalizwd zener diode will adjust its internal resistance to always drop the same voltage (its zener voltage) for any current flowing through it above 0. Consequently the resistor and zener diode make a voltage dividing network that we can analyze. Supply voltage - zener voltage drop = voltage drop across the resistor. And if 10 amps flows through a circuit and the supply were 5 volts. Then 5v × 10 = (5-1.24v=3.76v)×10amps + 1.24v×10amps) power in = power lost to heat + power that splits water. Another words 3.76v drop across the resistor × 10 amps = 3.76 watts lost to heat and 1.24v × 10 amps = 12.4 watts to split water. Given the circuit above supplied 5 volts and 10 amps flowing through it then the circuit's net resistance is r(total)=supplyvoltage/amps or 5v/10amps=0.5ohms while the resistor circuit elements resistance is resistor voltage drop/amp=3.76v/10amps=.376ohms and the effective resistance of the zener diode is 1.24v/10 amps=0.124 ohms. What can we do with this? If all other things remain the same but we 1) double the surface area, we drop the resistor by 1/2,the same as if we add two resistors in parallel to each other, which would allow more current to flow but doesn't change the efficency. If one doubles the distance they double the resistor element value like adding two resistors in serries. Electrolisys Under heavy loads with two plates placed very close to each other might both have bubbles limit effective surface area exposed to the electrolyte, and have bubbles reduce the effective ion conducting cross section, which has the effect of increasing resistance. This is the most simple model. If there are other chemicals that participate in side reactions, then that may complicate the model. But I hope this model helps illustrate how electrolisys product is all about the amps. And while voltage helps push more amps, overvolts (voltage above water splitting voltage)×amps is simply lost making heat.
@brooksbryant24782 күн бұрын
I’d be interested to learn more of the theory behind electrochemistry!
@OIOIOIIOOIOOOOOIOIOOOIII2 күн бұрын
As far as the argument at 18:00 you might want to check out the latest AI that can in fact to a high degree of accuracy judge how much force is being exerted by tugging teams based on sight
@SodiumInteresting2 күн бұрын
Good video
@neuroatypical698411 сағат бұрын
I enjoy the theory based videos and think they make a nice first step but I also think they may disrupt your normal content I would recommend ether making a second channel with theory and linking to it or including sections of theory in your regular video's at the end
@No_One_07072 күн бұрын
MAKiT reference
@Hyo90002 күн бұрын
Oxidation is red in your mind? Haha, mine certainly gives it shades of red. Are you a synesthete, by any chance? I am. Reduction is a light-blue-shaded silver to me, fwiw :3
@ScrapScience2 күн бұрын
Not a synesthete - I wouldn't say my colour associations are anywhere near common enough or strong enough to meet that definition. My chemistry ones are all just based on the common molecular modelling colours (oxygen is red in those, so oxygen and oxidation just seem naturally red to me now).
@Toksyuryel7 сағат бұрын
@@ScrapScience oxidation is commonly associated with combustion so it makes sense to me that it should be red
@henryrroland2 күн бұрын
Please, more videos about Butler-Volmer equation and Pourbaix diagram
@vance735416 күн бұрын
Great Video!
@ScrapScience16 күн бұрын
Wow. Did you get here through the playlist? Very well done.
@vance735416 күн бұрын
@@ScrapScience I am nearly out of videos to watch on your channel if im bein honest, i am on the heavy water play list now and i think that is the last one i have to watch lol
@Moritz___4 сағат бұрын
great video. came out just in time 2 days ago. but could not get the time to watch it. looking to craft together my first electrolytic cell beeing a chlorate cell from a phone charger and some carbon rods... well see how that goes
@vance73542 күн бұрын
I would love to see a Whole Series of Videos on what Solutions to use to make different things, for example, What electrodes and Solutions to use to make colloidal silver at the highest concentration possible. I know I need one piece of silver, but I dont know what to use as the Solution, and I dont know if the silver needs to be the Anode or Cathode.
@ScrapScience2 күн бұрын
I'll personally be staying very clear of colloidal silver (I don't want to attract any medical conspiracy nutcases to my channel), but yeah, the future of the Scrap Science is to just continue making demonstrations of random electrochemical reactions. Stay tuned!
@vance7354Күн бұрын
@@ScrapScience oh see i dont want it for Medical use, I want it to spray on plants to reverse their sex from female to male, so that i can collect pollen for breeding projects. Silver blocks Ethelyne production in the plant and causes the sex to change. I totally get not wanting to attract that psudo science crowd, 100%
@kerimkstati2 күн бұрын
2:45 mercury & ammonia/Na electron conductive?
@ScrapScience2 күн бұрын
Yes, they are.
@kerimkstati2 күн бұрын
@ScrapScience and mercury can also be an ionic conductor ?
@ScrapScience2 күн бұрын
@kerimkstati since mercury is a metal, it’s only conductive for electrons, not ions.
@kerimkstati2 күн бұрын
@ScrapScience sorry, i got it wrong, i meant can it be an ion carrier? in chlor-alkali cells where it is like a membrane
@ScrapScience2 күн бұрын
In the case of a chloralkali cell, mercury is actually acting to transport sodium metal, not sodium ions. Sodium ions can be reduced to sodium metal on a mercury surface, and in the metallic form are soluble in the mercury, allowing them to be transported to another reaction vessel. From a circuit perspective, the only charges that the mercury can conduct are electrons.
@zodd0001Күн бұрын
What if voltage is increased to 100 V or more ?
@ScrapScienceКүн бұрын
Mainly, a lot of energy will be wasted as heat. It's easy to assume the current draw would be enormous under these circumstances, but it's almost certain the current would be limited by some factor. In reactions that generate gas, the current would likely be limited by the formation of the bubbles on the electrode surface (which are insulating and block current flow). In reactions that don't generate gas, the current would probably be limited by the rate of transport of the reactants towards the electrode surface (or the products away from the electrode surface).
@zodd0001Күн бұрын
@@ScrapScience I understand. Thanks.
@kevinlatulippe694421 сағат бұрын
Lots of your videos are a miss and fail or create such weak products that the results are not very useful Also are labor intensive for little results or products
@infectedrainbowКүн бұрын
Thank you so much for this in depth explanation of electron exchange during electrolysis. I'm just a hobbyist, mostly dealing with electroforming, but these details are completely overlooked in our community. I feel like most tutorials are a cartoon version, for literal morons, of this video.