Hey guys ! I've seen all of the periodic table of videos and I really think I have a passion about it. Do you have any .pdf or websites to recomend me to get started ?
>Shared pic to make you cackle like I did at least
>>8639084
Any college General Chemistry I book will introduce you to a huge swathe of information. General chemistry II is largely about more mathematical portions of chemistry including titrations, acid numbers and a slew of other acid/base topics.
Next you'll want to delve into Organic Chemistry, but if you aren't interested don't go onto Organic chemistry II because its going to suck ass as it gets thicker and thicker with reactions, mechanisms and so forth. You might learn about NMR here but thats more analytical than not, there is little math in Orgo.
Inorganic after that is a lot of metal chemistry, crystal field theory, ligand theory and tons of other stuff
http://libgen.io/book/index.php?md5=34EDB7D1B5D02FB6AC53A6939A335756
It's thick with information and my guess is you're probably going to start and give up. However, if you want to start learning, this is the way to go.
>>8639084
Crash Course Chemistry on Youtube. Binge watch it, to get a 10,000-foot perspective of what kind of topics and concepts are part of Chemistry.
Next step: Khan Academy. Go to khanacademy.com, and proceed through the Chemistry lessons with exercises.
Third step: Get a college-level chem textbook from Library Genesis. The /sci/ wikia page will give recommended textbooks. Review what you know, study what you don't. Do as many of the exercises as you can.
You may have noticed that I'm telling you to learn the same shit three times. That's exactly what I'm telling you. Repetition and review make the knowledge permanent. That's the difference between being informed and being educated.
Good luck to you, mutherfucker. You won't take this advice, but you still deserve the best.
Here's the wiki's list of recommended chemistry books
http://4chan-science.wikia.com/wiki/Chemistry_Textbook_Recommendations
Oh, and look up ocw.mit.edu and follow the lecture videos for their chemistry class. Pretty good free resource.
>>8639353
Studying Chem now and this is exactly what I supplemented part of my study with while studying it at uni. Except for Crash Course Chemistry. Couldn't watch past the first 5 or 6 episodes, too cringey