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Offline Professor Gaarder

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basically, I am in 8th grade and have a powerful interest in chemistry. despite my age, I can recite the first 33 elements by heart, and can give you a chemical formula for an atom when given a name.

my purpose is simple: I need to make a web database on everything related to atoms and molecules, as well as scientific basis for folklore, and I need your help.

I have no idea how you guys could help, I figure maybe we could compile a list of all the compounds you can find notes on?

Offline Arkcon

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basically, I am in 8th grade and have a powerful interest in chemistry.

Greetings to you Dr., and welcome.

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despite my age, I can recite the first 33 elements by heart, and can give you a chemical formula for an atom when given a name.

Oh hey, I remember when I used to do that.  I was a slower learner than you, I only got up to that when I was 14 or 15.  Kudos to you.  But, um, not to go harsh on you, but, not a very practical trick.  It doesn't really help you with chemistry, is what I mean.

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my purpose is simple: I need to make a web database on everything related to atoms and molecules, as well as scientific basis for folklore, and I need your help.

I have no idea how you guys could help, I figure maybe we could compile a list of all the compounds you can find notes on?

OK.  You get started, and ask us for the ones you have trouble on.  Not to harshen the buzz again, but practicality ...  nah, I'm not seeing it.
Hey, I'm not judging.  I just like to shoot straight.  I'm a man of science.

Offline Sev

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...compile a list of all the compounds you can find notes on?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_compounds

Offline Kryolith

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basically, I am in 8th grade and have a powerful interest in chemistry. despite my age, I can recite the first 33 elements by heart...

Respect!  :)

Just a hint: It makes more sense to learn them by group and not by period and of course it does really help you with chemistry.

Offline Professor Gaarder

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Just a hint: It makes more sense to learn them by group and not by period and of course it does really help you with chemistry.

Yeah, I now realize that 33 isn't much of a feat. A friend of mine can go to 47.

Alkali Metals, Alkaline Earth Metals, Transitional Metals, Lanthanides, Actinides, NonMetals, Halogens, and Noble Gases.

Basically, even if you can find lists, I need hypothetical compounds. Compounds that properties of smaller versions and alterations tell you exist.

For example, hydrocarbons go up to 12 carbon atoms, but can it hold a 13th?

This is the kind of question I need answered, and I believe that such a large number of chemical experts would be able to help me in this quest. First question on my priority list is:

1. What elements, other than noble gases, do not mix with other elements? If certain combinations don't mix, what are they?

Simple process of elimination to narrow down the hypothetical compounds.

Offline Arkcon

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Yeah, I now realize that 33 isn't much of a feat. A friend of mine can go to 47.

No, that's not what I meant.  I usually go to the periodic table, I haven't memorized them all.  It really doesn't have practical value for day to day chemistry.  Yes, I've memorized some easy reference values, like the molecular mass of NaOH is 40, the molecular mass of NaCl is 58.44 -- and it is a little bit fun to just spout those off when someone needs them.  But it's just a game really, it doesn't really make me a better chemist.

Lots of very naive people think how high their child can count makes them future mathematicians.  And they are wrong.  Likewise, human calculators, who do long division in their heads, really aren't all that brilliant, compared to people who might use a calculator, and work on more abstract theorems.

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Alkali Metals, Alkaline Earth Metals, Transitional Metals, Lanthanides, Actinides, NonMetals, Halogens, and Noble Gases.

Ok, you know their names.  But what do the names mean to you.  Really.  List 'em again, and say what they are.


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Basically, even if you can find lists, I need hypothetical compounds. Compounds that properties of smaller versions and alterations tell you exist.

What you're saying here isn't even remotely chemistry. Why for example, "hypothetical compounds"?  Bored with real life at age 13 are you?  The second statement, say it again, out loud, it means ... what?

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For example, hydrocarbons go up to 12 carbon atoms, but can it hold a 13th?

This one is simply not true.  Check out some chemistry or science books appropriate for your grade level.  They'll tell you, carbon chains go much larger, that is practically the definition of polymers.

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This is the kind of question I need answered, and I believe that such a large number of chemical experts would be able to help me in this quest. First question on my priority list is:

1. What elements, other than noble gases, do not mix with other elements? If certain combinations don't mix, what are they?

Simple process of elimination to narrow down the hypothetical compounds.

Are you writing a sci-fi story?  Non-scientists writing sci-fi tend to ask questions like this.  You want some answers, that don't actually have answers, based on some chemical concepts you've pretty much just made up, that have no bearing on real-life chemistry.  Am I headed in the right direction?  Because if so, this conversation can take weeks, just to end up nowhere.
« Last Edit: February 08, 2008, 08:12:37 AM by Arkcon »
Hey, I'm not judging.  I just like to shoot straight.  I'm a man of science.

Offline Professor Gaarder

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Since my chemical knowledge is "Prettymuch non-existant", I suppose I should just leave forever?

I can't help but think some of the people here (perhaps just one, but I can't be sure) are very unaccepting of newbies. I want to learn more about chemistry, and I want to share whatever I learn with other people. That's why I decided to create my page about chemistry and research.

Do I still need to prove that I am knowledgable about the same topic I've been studying since fifth grade?

Hypothetical compounds are unseen chemicals that we have neither seen nor used, and therefore do not know the properties of. If a list of all possible combinations gets out, blanks can be filled based on research and logic (don't say logic does nothing, because Mendeleev predicted quite a few of the elements that were not discovered until he was long dead).

Offline Borek

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I can't help but think some of the people here (perhaps just one, but I can't be sure) are very unaccepting of newbies. I want to learn more about chemistry, and I want to share whatever I learn with other people. That's why I decided to create my page about chemistry and research.

We have nothing against newbies, but you are starting from the wrong side. So far you have stated things that clearly show that despite studying the topic since fifth grade (your own words) you still know nothing. Nothing wrong about that - we all at some point were at the same position. However, you are trying to find your own ways to move into unknown land of chemistry - and that won't get you far. Start learning basic concepts, your Chem101, once you will be done with that you will see why the approach you propose is futile.

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Hypothetical compounds are unseen chemicals that we have neither seen nor used, and therefore do not know the properties of. If a list of all possible combinations gets out, blanks can be filled based on research and logic (don't say logic does nothing, because Mendeleev predicted quite a few of the elements that were not discovered until he was long dead).

This logic is not faulty, but this approach is unnecessary. We know enough at this point to predict properties of most of the compounds we can imagine. In a way what you propose has already been done. List of all possible combinations is infinite and we know for sure that most of these hypothetical compounds are useless or unstable - and we know thanks to the gigantic amount of data and knowledge we have collected so far. Instead of investing your time into something that doesn't make sense, learn enough to understand why this approach is a waste of time.
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Offline Arkcon

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Thanks Borek: you said what I was thinking very clearly, and probably a lot more politely than I would. ;)

OK, Dr. Gaardner, save this discussion somewhere, and after a year's worth of High School chemistry (get a book from the public library if you can't wait) revisit your position and see if what we've said doesn't make sense.

In the meantime, to build up useful skills for your future chemistry studies, lets start with what you know about the groups of elements you've quoted above.

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blanks can be filled based on research and logic (don't say logic does nothing, because Mendeleev predicted quite a few of the elements that were not discovered until he was long dead).

"Quite a few", nah, only "just a few" and not very well.  The periodicy of the early early periodic table, which Mendeleev was based on atomic mass, and not atomic number, tends to be a little overstated in beginner chemistry courses.  Now there's a project, research that point and see which statement has more support.  You can work it into a high school chemistry essay question, and really show what you know.

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Since my chemical knowledge is "Prettymuch non-existant", I suppose I should just leave forever?

Ouch, harsh there guy, who said that to you?  I mean, besides you.
Hey, I'm not judging.  I just like to shoot straight.  I'm a man of science.

Offline Professor Gaarder

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I apologise.. I've been a bit demanding, and I realize that I've got a bit of a temper. I am a bit on edge after my experience at Pixeltendo. I realize the two forums are entirely different, but they are nonetheless both forums.

So let's just start from ground zero, disregarding the elements as I have about 20 copies of the periodic table laying around my house and I have the most reactive elements comitted to memory.

You're not the group of fat-headed group of nerds I usually have to deal with. You guys are cool. If you understand that I'm not completely starting from scratch in learning about chemistry, I would enjoy learning more from people who don't stop at the minimum the way teachers do.

What all can you tell me, without citing wikipedia?

PS I have two chemistry books, one of which is college prep. I understand it completely.

Offline Arkcon

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PS I have two chemistry books, one of which is college prep. I understand it completely.

I used to read college prep text books back in the day.  They're crap, in some cases even more dumbed down than high school texts, which you've seemed to have had some bad experiences with as well.  Hit the public library for some real college textbooks, the older the copyright the better, and see what you can find out about how compounds form.  There are quite a few threads on this board lately on the subject.
Hey, I'm not judging.  I just like to shoot straight.  I'm a man of science.

Offline Borek

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What all can you tell me, without citing wikipedia?

It doesn't work this way. We can help you on fine details, but you have to know where you are lost and you have to ask specific questions.

I can tell you that for the diprotic acids if the difference between dissocation constants is large enough so that only first dissociation step is responsible for pH, concentration of fully dissociated form is numerically identical with Ka2 regardless of the acid concentration. Is it in any way helpfull?
« Last Edit: February 08, 2008, 12:52:12 PM by Borek »
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Offline agrobert

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Read Pauling's General Chemistry.  If you have trouble understanding something then post a specific question.  I don't understand all of this hypothetical stuff.
In the realm of scientific observation, luck is only granted to those who are prepared. -Louis Pasteur

Offline Professor Gaarder

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I used to read college prep text books back in the day.  They're crap, in some cases even more dumbed down than high school texts, which you've seemed to have had some bad experiences with as well.  Hit the public library for some real college textbooks, the older the copyright the better, and see what you can find out about how compounds form.  There are quite a few threads on this board lately on the subject.

I realize this as well. Also, the older books may be better for info about compounds, but the farther back you go, the less elements there were. I have a pamphlet that I got in 1999, with an ancient periodic table in it. Rutherfordium hadn't been named yet, and Tungsten was still called Wolfram. The only accurate part was the atomic weight.

But yes, I will check more books for older copyright dates.

Also, I have a new objective. I have a small desk set up in the corner of my dad's garage, which I use to do minor chemistry experiments (not out of a book). My new objective is to collect all the elements that are safe to have. No mercury, no Technetium, no lanthanides or actinides, no arsenic, and no halogens unless they are bonded with another element. I will be using electrolysis/hydrochloric acid/boiling liquids/other chemical reactions to get as many pure elements as possible. When I am satisfied, I will proceed to collect, confirm, and label containers full of known compounds. Assume that I will learn something new every day about chemistry, because I probably do. Tomorrow, I will be using hydrochloric acid to clean a piece of copper ore I bought a couple of years back.


And just remember that my knowledge is not entirely non-existant, it just lacks some important details that could very well spare me some embarassment.

Offline Professor Gaarder

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What all can you tell me, without citing wikipedia?

It doesn't work this way. We can help you on fine details, but you have to know where you are lost and you have to ask specific questions.

I can tell you that for the diprotic acids if the difference between dissocation constants is large enough so that only first dissociation step is responsible for pH, concentration of fully dissociated form is numerically identical with Ka2 regardless of the acid concentration. Is it in any way helpfull?

Well, then, question 1-is there a type of hydrocarbon formulated C13H28?

This is what has been plaguing me ever since my google searches turned up nothing past C12H26.

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