Dr. Stephen Lukacs (March 2013)
Watch it, bases are just as reactive and corrosive as acids. So, don't be fooled into thinking that we are safe.
(November 2013) You have touched on binary and polyatomic acid nomenclature and also acid/base double displacement/replacement reactions, a.k.a., neutralization reactions and titrations in previous chapters. This is a review to help you reconnect to that material.
(November 2013) The pH and pOH scales along with their equations and some calculations with STRONG acids and bases.
(November 2013) Titrations are a laboratory technique that mixes bases with acids to their end point, which achieves neutralization. This PodCast centers on the calculations of those reactions.
(November 2014) Equivalents, and its solution analog, Normality, break many complex computations down to simpler once you apply this concept. Equivalents and normality are commonly used in medical terminology.
NOTE: The first 8 minutes of this video are the same introductory comments as in "Equivalents and Normality" under the "Solutions and Molarity" lecture. If you saw that podcast, then you may skip the first 8 minutes of this lecture. The remaining problems focus on acid/base solutions and reactions.
(November 2014) Some calculations with WEAK acids. This is intended for my ADVANCED students, like in CHM1025.