I'm all about educating people on calculus, physics, the SAT, and all forms of math. School always came easy to me, but I know it doesn't for most people. I discovered in college that I'm really good at tutoring and explaining things and being patient with struggling students. That's why I want to give back with free tutorials, explanations, etc. on this channel.
Thanks for this, I've seen another approach to identifying the type of chemical bond in a compound apart from electronic configuration. I will introduce this approach in my lessons Aluminum chloride is covalent, as you said, in chemistry there are exceptions to rules
you're awesome man, i happened to stumble across this... and you've just taught me more in 6 mins than most teachers have in the past who had far more time to do so! keep it up
1 suggestion for u that pls add caption with it because RU-vid default caption is very poor Specially we are Indians and have different accent of English but I understood it but may be so many people specially students can't be able to get ur words so add caption by ur side Anyways nice 👍👍
Hydrogen is a special case. Even though it's on the left side, it can be part of ionic or covalent bonds depending on the other elements it is bonding with.