Double bonds Memes

Posts tagged with Double bonds

Kowalski, Analysis Of This Trans-1,2-Ethylenedicarboxylic Acid, Pronto!

Kowalski, Analysis Of This Trans-1,2-Ethylenedicarboxylic Acid, Pronto!
This chemistry student is making a pun about molecular isomerism while simultaneously acknowledging their lab safety record is... questionable. In organic chemistry, cis-trans isomerism refers to how groups are arranged around a double bond - cis means same side, trans means opposite sides. The joke brilliantly parallels gender transitioning with chemical isomerization, while the self-aware "something is about to be on fire" comment speaks to the chaotic energy of undergraduate lab experiments. That beaker probably contains something far less ambitious than their proposed project, but far more flammable than their professor would prefer.

Cis And Trans Are Everywhere!

Cis And Trans Are Everywhere!
Holy molecular arrangements, Batman! The prefix battle rages across disciplines! In chemistry, cis/trans isomers are like identical twins wearing their substituents on different sides of a double bond. Meanwhile, biology's showing off with cis fats (nuts, avocados - the "good" stuff) versus trans fats (french fries, margarine - the "I'll regret this tomorrow" stuff). Even mathematics couldn't resist joining the party with its own cis/trans functions! It's like the universe decided "same concept, different contexts" was the ultimate inside joke for nerds. Next time someone says "pick a side," just remember - molecules had this identity crisis first!

No! Not My Bending!

No! Not My Bending!
The perfect crossover between organic chemistry and Avatar: The Last Airbender doesn't exi— oh wait, here it is! Converting an alkane to an alkene literally removes a "bend" in the molecule by creating a double bond that forces carbon atoms into a rigid, straight alignment. So yes, you quite literally took away its bending. Chemistry students everywhere just snorted coffee through their noses while their non-STEM friends wonder why they're giggling at molecular structures again.

Benzene: The Superior Ring System

Benzene: The Superior Ring System
Rejecting cyclohexane in favor of benzene is the chemistry equivalent of choosing the cool kid at school. One's a boring saturated ring just sitting there doing nothing interesting, while the other has that delicious aromatic stability with delocalized electrons floating around like they own the place. The resonance structure in benzene is basically the molecular flex that says "I've got conjugated double bonds and I'm not afraid to use them." Chemistry students inevitably develop this preference around the same time they stop washing their lab coats.

The Only Correct Way To Draw A Benzene Ring

The Only Correct Way To Draw A Benzene Ring
Behold, the "I have three exams tomorrow but I'm still going to draw every double bond in this benzene ring" masterpiece. Organic chemistry students spend years perfecting the hexagon only to end up with this sleep-deprived abomination that looks like it was drawn during an earthquake. Pro tip: if your benzene doesn't resemble something a kindergartner would draw, you're not truly experiencing the authentic chemistry curriculum. The resonance structures are clearly visible... in an alternate universe where symmetry doesn't exist.