#Hydrogenball
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How To Understand Resonance Structures using Cute Balls
There comes a time in every man’s (or woman/nonbinary/other/etc)'s life that they have to learn about resonance structures and delocalized electrons.
Or probably not. I don’t think most people know what it is. But you’re going to!
Right now.
No, you don’t have a choice in the matter.
Get all that? Understand now? Of course not, no one does. READ THIS!
ARTICLE I MADE YEARS AGO FOR MORE IN-DEPTH AND FUNNY EXPLANATION!
#chemiballs#science#chemistry#physics#art#Carbonball#Hydrogenball#Electronball#Oxygenball#Sulfurball
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Sodium Hydroxide + Hydrochloric Acid
The Hydrogenball ships them.
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Dumb and very esoteric chemiball comic about the mechanism of organic mercury poisoning
Selenium (Se) is a necessary micronutrient. It’s involved in the amino acid selenocysteine (Sec), which is like cysteine (Cys) but instead of sulfur, it’s selenium. Selenocysteine is involved in selenoenzymes, which are important antioxidants.
Oxidants are highly reactive oxygen radicals that are sometimes accidentally made by the mitochondria. They really like to oxidize and destroy things like proteins, fats, and DNA. As it turns out, we need those things to not be destroyed.
Antioxidants are important because they’re useless and don’t do anything important other than be tempting targets for oxidants. They take the hit so you don’t have to. (though knowing biochemistry, I’m sure that most of them actually do everything, because it would just make too much sense otherwise.)
Organic mercury poisoning is bad because it permanently inhibits your selenoenzymes. This leaves the cell vulnerable to oxidation which is particularly bad for your brain cells.
In this case, methyl mercury (Hg-CH3) has previously bonded to the sulfur in Cysteineball and has now come near the selenocysteine ball.
Fun fact: the covalent binding affinities between mercury and selenium are about A MILLION times greater than with sulfur. I’m not exaggerating, it’s literally cited as ONE MILLION TIMES GREATER. So yeah, Mercuryblob immediately jumps to seleniumball and basically never lets go.
Sources: Ralston, N. & Azenkeng, Alexander & Raymond, Laura. (2012). Mercury-Dependent Inhibition of Selenoenzymes and Mercury Toxicity. 10.1007/978-1-4614-2383-6_5. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/278702735_Mercury-Dependent_Inhibition_of_Selenoenzymes_and_Mercury_Toxicity
Ralston NVC, Raymond LJ. Mercury’s neurotoxicity is characterized by its disruption of selenium biochemistry. Biochim Biophys Acta Gen Subj. 2018 Nov;1862(11):2405-2416. doi: 10.1016/j.bbagen.2018.05.009. Epub 2018 May 9. PMID: 29753115.
#chemiballs#science#chemistry#biology#medicine#mercuryblob#seleniumball#carbonball#hydrogenball#I made this comic because i lost a bet#sorry i have bad handwriting
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Meet the Chemiballs: Exposition and Cute Drawings of the Nonmetals
I love balls. Especially Countryballs, aka Polandball, a popular meme format where countries are embodied in this particular art style. Like Hetalia but for not-weebs. I mean, just look at r/countryball. These little blobs are so cute.
Lots of other "ball communities" have spawned from Countryballs, such as Ideologyballs, Planetballs, and LGBallT. One of the little-known ones is Chemiballs. At first, I thought I was the first one to have the idea as I doodled them in my notebook during chemistry class, but no. Someone beat me to it just a couple of years before me. (hecking go check out the subreddit it's a great small community https://www.reddit.com/r/chemiball/)
Anyways here's some nonmetal balls I drew a couple years ago, AREN'T THEY CUTE??
here's an old edutainment blog page I wrote about the these elements if you're interested
#chemiballs#science#chemistry#organic chemistry#Hydrogenball#Deuteriumball#Tritiumball#Carbonball#Oxygenball#Nitrogenball#Phosphorusball#Sulfurball#Seleniumball
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Meet the Chemiballs: Halogen Shenanigans
“Halogen” is a collective name for the elements that fall under fluorine in the periodic table. They all have the naming convention of ending in “-ine”, so you always know when something is a halogen. Though the same naming convention is used for a lot of random chemicals, like cadaverine or quinine, so it’s not a perfect system.
They're pretty scary chemicalballs 'cause they really like electronballs. Like, they really heckin' like 'em. They'll sell your own mother just to get a sweet sweet taste of that electronegativity.
POV you are being mugged by Flourineball. Hand over your electrons.
Astatineball is horrified as Tennessineball fades away after giving its final message. Astatineball knows it has a 50% chance of being doomed to the same fate in 8.1 hours or so (both elements have very short half-lives)
for more info i guess
#chemiballs#science#chemistry#art#Flourineball#Chlorineball#Hydrogenball#Bromineblob#Iodineball#Astatineball#Tennessineball
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