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  • If you're wondering

  • this is how the most revolutionary course in biology of all time begins.

  • Come today to learn about covalent and ionic and hydrogen bonds

  • What about electron orbitals

  • and the octet rule

  • and what does it all have to do with a mad man named Gilbert Lewis?

  • It's all contained within.

  • Hello, I’m Hank

  • I assume youre here because youre interested in biology

  • and if you are, that makes sense because

  • like any good 50 Cent song, biology is just about sex and not dying.

  • Everyone watching this should be interested in sex and not dying

  • being that you are, I assume, a human being.

  • I'm going to be teaching this biology course differently than most courses you've ever

  • taken in your life

  • For example, I'm not going to spend the first class

  • talking about how I’m going to spend the rest of class.

  • I'm just going to start teaching you, like right about now.

  • I may say one more thing before I start teaching.

  • Yes, I am going to!

  • It's that: if I’m going too fast for you, the great thing about YouTube is

  • that you can just rewind.

  • Watch stuff over and over again if it's confusing.

  • Hopefully, it will become less confusing.

  • And you're even allowed to fast forward through the bits that you already know.

  • Another tip, you can actually even use the number keys on your keyboard to move around

  • in the video.

  • And I promise, you can do this to me as much as you want and I'm totally not going to mind.

  • A great professor of mine once told me that in order to really understand any topic

  • you have to understand a little bit of the level of complexity just below that topic.

  • The level of complexity just below biology is chemistry

  • unless you're a biochemist in which case you would argue that it's biochemistry.

  • Either way, we're gonna have to know a little bit of chemistry in order to get through biology.

  • And so THAT, my friends, is where we're going to start.

  • I am a collection of organic molecules called Hank Green.

  • Organic compounds are a class of compounds that contain carbon.

  • And carbon is this sexy little minx on the periodic table

  • that's, you know...

  • disinterested in monogamy.

  • A jezebel. Bit of a tramp. Hussy.

  • When I say carbon is small I mean that it's actually

  • as an atom, it's a relatively small atom.

  • It has 6 protons and 6 neutrons for a total atomic weight of 12.

  • Because of that, carbon doesn't take up a lot of space.

  • And so carbon can form itself into weird rings, and sheets and spirals

  • and double and even triple bonds.

  • It can do all sorts of things that could never be accomplished by more bulky atoms.

  • It's basically, your atomic equivalent of an olympic gymnast.

  • It can only do all of those wonderful, beautiful, elegant things because it's kind of tiny.

  • It's also said that carbon is kind

  • and that's an interesting sort of thing to say about an atom.

  • It's not like some other elements that are just

  • desperately trying to do anything they can

  • to fill up their electron orbitals.

  • No, carbon knows what it's like to be alone, and so it's not all

  • Please! I'll do anything for your electrons!”

  • needy like fluorine or chlorine or sodium is.

  • Elements like chlorine if you breath them in they like literally tear up your insides

  • and sodium, sodium is insane if you put it in water it explodes!

  • Carbon though...

  • Meh.

  • It wants more electrons, but it's not gonna kill to get them.

  • It makes and breaks bonds like a 13-year old mall rat.

  • And it doesn't even hold a grudge.

  • Carbon is also, as I mentioned before, a bit of a tramp, because, it needs four extra electrons

  • and so it'll bond with pretty much whoever happens to be nearby

  • And also because it needs four electrons, it'll bond with two, or three

  • or even four of those things at the same time

  • And carbon is willing and interested to bond with lots of different molecules

  • like hydrogen, oxygen, phosphorous, nitrogen

  • or to other molecules of carbon.

  • It can do this in infinite configurations

  • allowing it to be the core atom of complicated structures that make living things like ourselves

  • because carbon is this perfect mix of small, kind, and a little bit trampy

  • life is entirely based on this element.

  • Carbon is the foundation of biology.

  • It's so fundamental that scientists have a pretty difficult time

  • even conceiving of life that isn't based on carbon.

  • Life is only possible on earth because carbon is always floating around in our atmosphere

  • in the form of carbon dioxide.

  • So it's important to note, when I talk about carbon bonding with other elements

  • I'm not actually talking about sex, it's just a useful analogy.

  • Carbon, on it's own, is an atom with 6 protons, 6 neutrons, and 6 electrons.

  • Atoms, have electron shells, and they need to have these shells filled

  • in order to be happy, fulfilled atoms.

  • So carbon, has 6 total electrons, 2 for the first shell

  • so it's totally happy

  • and 4 of the 8 it needs to fill the second shell.

  • Carbon forms a type of bond that we call covalent.

  • This is when atoms actually are sharing electrons with each other.

  • So in the case of methane, which is pretty much the simplest carbon compound ever.

  • Carbon is sharing it's 4 electrons, in it's outer electron shell, with 4 atoms of hydrogen.

  • Hydrogen atoms only have 1 electron, so they want their first S orbital filled.

  • Carbon shares its 4 electrons with those 4 hydrogens

  • and those 4 hydrogens each share 1 electron with carbon.

  • So everybody's happy.

  • In chemistry and biology this is often represented by what we call Lewis dot structures.

  • Good lord, I'm in a chair!

  • I'm in a chair and there's a book.

  • Apparently I have something to tell you that's in this book.

  • Which is a book called Lewis: Acids and Bases.

  • By Hank Green

  • Gilbert Lewis, the guy who thought up Lewis dot structures

  • was also the guy behind Lewis Acids and Bases

  • and he was nominated for the nobel prize

  • 35 times.

  • This is more nominations than anyone else ever in history.

  • And the number of times he won was roughly the same number of times

  • that everyone else in the world has won.

  • Which is zero.

  • Lewis disliked this a great deal.

  • It's kind of like a baseball player having more hits than any other player in history

  • and no home runs.

  • He may have been the most influential chemist of all time.

  • He coined the term photon, he revolutionized how we think about acids and bases

  • and he produced the first molecule of heavy water.

  • He was the first person to conceptualize the covalent bond that we're talking about right

  • now.

  • Gilbert Lewis died alone in his laboratory while working on cyanide compounds

  • after having had lunch with a younger, more charismatic colleague

  • who had won the Nobel Prize and who had worked on the Manhattan project.

  • Many suspect that he killed himself with the cyanide compounds he was working on

  • but the medical examiner said heart attack, without really looking into it.

  • I told you all of that because

  • the little Lewis dot structure that we use to represent how atoms bond to each other

  • is something that was created by a troubled mad genius.

  • It's not some abstract scientific thing that's always existed.

  • It's a tool that was thought up by a guy

  • and it was so useful that we've been using it ever since.

  • In biology most compounds can be displayed in Lewis dot structure form

  • and here's how that works:

  • These structures basically show how atoms bond together to make up molecules.

  • And one of the rules of thumb when you're making these diagrams

  • is that the elements that we're working with here react with one another in such a way

  • that each atom ends up with 8 electrons in it's outermost shell.

  • That is called the Octet Rule.

  • Because atoms want to complete their octets of electrons to be happy and satisfied.

  • Oxygen has 6 electrons in it's octet and needs 2 which is why we get H2O

  • It can also bond with carbon

  • which needs 4.

  • So you get 2 double bonds to 2 different oxygen atoms and you end up with CO2.

  • That pesky global warming gas and also the stuff that makes all life on Earth possible.

  • Nitrogen has 5 electrons in its outer shell. Here's how we count them:

  • There are 4 placeholders. Each of them wants 2 atoms.

  • And like people getting on a bus they prefer to start out not sitting next to each other.

  • I'm not kidding about this, they really don't double up until they have to.

  • So for maximum happiness, nitrogen bonds with 3 hydrogens, forming ammonia.

  • Or with 2 hydrogens sticking off another group of atoms, which we call an amino group.

  • And if that amino group is bonded to a carbon that is bonded to a carboxylic acid group

  • then you have

  • an amino acid!

  • You've heard of those, right?

  • Sometimes electrons are shared equally within a covalent bond like with O2.

  • That's called a non-polar covalent bond. But often one of the participants is more greedy.

  • In water for example, the oxygen molecule sucks the electrons in

  • and they spend more time with the oxygen than with the hydrogens.

  • This creates a slight positive charge around the hydrogens

  • and a slight negative charge around the oxygen.

  • When something has a charge we say that it's polar. It has a positive and negative pole.

  • And so it's a polar covalent bond.

  • Now let's talk for a moment about a completely different type of bond, which is an ionic

  • bond.

  • And that's when, instead of sharing electrons

  • atoms just completely wholeheartedly donate or accept an electron from another atom

  • and then live happily as a charged atom.

  • And there is actually no such thing as a charged atom.

  • If an atom has a charge, it's an ion.

  • Atoms in general prefer to be neutral, but compared with having a full octet, it's not

  • that big of a deal.

  • Just like we often choose between being emotionally balanced and sexually satisfied

  • atoms will sometimes make sacrifices for that octet.

  • The most common ionic compound in our daily lives is salt.

  • Sodium chloride. NaCl.

  • The stuff, despite it's deliciousness, as I mentioned previously

  • is made up of two really nasty chemicals. Sodium and chlorine.

  • Chlorine is what we call a halogen, which is an element that only needs one electron

  • to fulfill it's octet.

  • And sodium is an alkaline metal which means that it only has one electron in it's octet.

  • So chlorine and sodium are so close to being satisfied

  • that they will happily destroy anything in their path in order to fulfill their octet.

  • And thus, there's actually no better outcome than just to get

  • chlorine and sodium together and have them lovin' on each other.

  • They immediately transfer their electrons.

  • So that sodium doesn't have it's one extra, and chlorine fills it's octet.

  • They become Na+ and Cl- and are so charged that they stick together

  • and we call that stickiness an ionic bond.

  • And just like if you have two really crazy friends

  • it might be good to get them together so that they'll stop bothering you.

  • Same thing works with sodium and chlorine.

  • You get those two together, and they'll bother no one.

  • And suddenly, they don't want to destroy, they just want to be delicious.

  • Chemical changes like this are a big deal.

  • Remember, chlorine and sodium, just a second ago, were definitely killing you, and now

  • they're tasty.

  • Now we're coming to the last bond that we're going to discuss

  • in our intro to chemistry here and that's the hydrogen bond.

  • Imagine that you remember water, I hope that you didn't forget water.

  • Since water is stuck together in a polar covalent bond

  • the hydrogen bit is positively charge and the oxygen bit is negatively charged.

  • So when water molecules are moving around

  • we generally think of them as a perfect fluid but they actually stick together a little

  • bit.

  • Hydrogen side to oxygen side.

  • You can actually see this with your eyes if you fill up a glass of water too full

  • it will bubble at the top. The water will stick together at the top.

  • That's the polar covalent bonds sticking the water molecules to each other

  • so that they don't flow right over the top of the glass.

  • These relatively weak hydrogen bonds happen in all sorts of chemical compounds

  • they don't just happen in water. An they actually play an extremely important role in proteins

  • which are the chemicals that pretty much up our entire bodies.

  • A final thing to note here is that bonds, even covalent bonds, ionic bonds

  • even with their own class

  • are often much different strengths.

  • And we tend to just write them with a little line

  • but that line can represent a very very strong covalent bond or a relatively weak covalent

  • bond.

  • Sometimes ionic bonds are stronger than covalent bonds

  • though that's generally not the case and the strength of covalent bonds varies wildly.

  • How these bonds are made and broken is intensely important to life.

  • And to our lives. Making and breaking bonds is in fact the key to life itself

  • and also the key to death. For example, if you were to ingest some sodium metal.

  • Keep this in mind as we move forward through biology:

  • Even the sexiest person you have ever met in your life

  • is just a collection of organic compounds rambling around in a sack of water.

  • Review time!

  • Now we have the table of contents

  • Which I know is supposed to come at the beginning of things

  • But we are revolutionary here we're doing it different

  • so you can click on any of the things here

  • and you can go back and review what you learned.

  • Or didn't learn.

  • And if you have questions please please please please please please please

  • ask them in the comments and we'll be down there answering them for you.

  • So thank you for joining us.

  • It was a pleasure, it was a pleasure working with you today.

If you're wondering

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