This Solutions Manual to accompany Raymond Chang's Physical Chemistry for the Chemical and Biological Sciences restates each of the 1020 innovative chapter-ending problems in the text, followed by a detailed solution. Each solution is approached with the same conversational style that the authors use in their own classrooms as they try to "teach" solutions to the problems rather than simply giving out answers. One hundred forty-three figures and diagrams are used to illustrate the solutions. Both authors are recent recipients of the Henry Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar award and bring to the manual effective pedagogy as well as the vitality of modern physical chemistry.
Auflage
Sprache
Verlagsort
Mill Valley
Großbritannien
Zielgruppe
Für höhere Schule und Studium
Produkt-Hinweis
Broschur/Paperback
Klebebindung
Maße
Höhe: 280 mm
Breite: 217 mm
Dicke: 27 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-1-891389-11-5 (9781891389115)
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Helen O. Leung (Author) Mark D. Marshall and Helen O. Leung are faculty members in the chemistry department at Amherst College with over 30 years of combined experience teaching physical chemistry to undergraduates. They maintain active research programs in high resolution molecular spectroscopy of weakly bound species and reactant complexes and have appeared as authors on 50 scientific papers. They are both recent recipients of the Henry Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar Award and both received the John F. Burlew Award of the Connecticut Valley Section of the American Chemical Society for outstanding contributions to chemistry in their formative years. According to their students, they bring "infectious enthusiasm and encouragement" to the classroom and "make you think about the big picture."Mark D. Marshall and Helen O. Leung are faculty members in the chemistry department at Amherst College with over 30 years of combined experience teaching physical chemistry to undergraduates. They maintain active research programs in high resolution molecular spectroscopy of weakly bound species and reactant complexes and have appeared as authors on 50 scientific papers. They are both recent recipients of the Henry Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar Award and both received the John F. Burlew Award of the Connecticut Valley Section of the American Chemical Society for outstanding contributions to chemistry in their formative years. According to their students, they bring "infectious enthusiasm and encouragement" to the classroom and "make you think about the big picture."Mark D. Marshall (Author) Mark D. Marshall and Helen O. Leung are faculty members in the chemistry department at Amherst College with over 30 years of combined experience teaching physical chemistry to undergraduates. They maintain active research programs in high resolution molecular spectroscopy of weakly bound species and reactant complexes and have appeared as authors on 50 scientific papers. They are both recent recipients of the Henry Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar Award and both received the John F. Burlew Award of the Connecticut Valley Section of the American Chemical Society for outstanding contributions to chemistry in their formative years. According to their students, they bring "infectious enthusiasm and encouragement" to the classroom and "make you think about the big picture."Mark D. Marshall and Helen O. Leung are faculty members in the chemistry department at Amherst College with over 30 years of combined experience teaching physical chemistry to undergraduates. They maintain active research programs in high resolution molecular spectroscopy of weakly bound species and reactant complexes and have appeared as authors on 50 scientific papers. They are both recent recipients of the Henry Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar Award and both received the John F. Burlew Award of the Connecticut Valley Section of the American Chemical Society for outstanding contributions to chemistry in their formative years. According to their students, they bring "infectious enthusiasm and encouragement" to the classroom and "make you think about the big picture."
Table of Contents
Preface
Chapter 2: The Gas Laws
Chapter 3: Kinetic Theory of Gases
Chapter 4: The First Law of Thermodynamics
Chapter 5: The Second Law of Thermodynamics
Chapter 6: Gibbs and Helmholtz Energies and Their Applications
Chapter 7: Nonelectrolyte Solutions
Chapter 8: Electrolyte Solutions
Chapter 9: Chemical Equilibrium
Chapter 10: Electrochemistry
Chapter 11: Acids and Bases
Chapter 12: Chemical Kinetics
Chapter 13: Enzyme Kinetics
Chapter 14: Quantum Mechanics and Atomic Structure
Chapter 15: The Chemical Bond
Chapter 16: Intermolecular Forces
Chapter 17: Spectroscopy
Chapter 18: Molecular Symmetry and Optical Activity
Chapter 19: Photochemistry and Photobiology
Chapter 20: The Solid State
Chapter 21: The Liquid State
Chapter 22: Macromolecules
Chapter 23: Statistical Thermodynamics
A group of people studying
Open New W