The book also includes a number of innovative features, including interactive exercises and real-world applications, designed to enhance student learning.
This is part two of two for Chemistry: Atoms First by OpenStax. This book covers chapters 11-21.
Fully revised and updated throughout to reflect important method developments and improvements since publication of the previous edition, this timely update includes the following significant revisions and new topics: Polarizable force ...
Advanced undergraduate and graduate students, as well as professionals in chemistry will benefit from this new edition.
Thus far we have examined features that are common to all types of chemical reactions. We conclude with an examination of one class of reactions that involves electron transfer—oxidation–reduction reactions. CONSUMER NOTE 5.9A General ...
This study guide delivers a big-picture view of difficult concepts and effective study tools to help students learn and understand the details of general, organic, and biochemistry topics.
This revised second edition contains a new chapter on optical spectroscopy, and updated methods and new references throughout.Andreas Manz received the 2015 Inventor Award for 'Lifetime Achievement' from the European Patent Office.Petra S ...
From the reviews of the first edition: "This book is not only informative and comprehensive for a novice reader, but also a valuable resource for a scientist and/or an industrialist for new and novel challenges." (Materials and ...
The Teacher's Edition includes a reduced full-color student text with chapter objectives, teaching aids and schedules, and the answers (with solutions) to all review questions. Grade 11.
The book features interviews with preeminent computational chemists, underscoring the role of collaboration in developing new science. Three of these interviews are new to this edition.
The electrons come from the π bond, so the double bond is where we start the arrow. We only need one arrow, because as the new C–H bond forms, the C atom at other end of the old π bond is left with only 6 electrons, ...