๐”– Scriptorium
โœฆ   LIBER   โœฆ

๐Ÿ“

Problems in General Chemistry

โœ Scribed by N.L.Glinka


Publisher
Mir Publisher
Year
1986
Tongue
English
Leaves
290
Category
Library

โฌ‡  Acquire This Volume

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

โœฆ Table of Contents


Front Cover
Title Page
Preface
Contents
1. SIMPLE STOICHIOMETRIC CALCULATIONS
1. Equivalent. Law of Equivalents
2. Fundamental Gas Laws
3. Partial Pressure of a Gas
4. The Mole. Avogadro's Law. Molar Volume of a Gas
5. Determining the Molecular Masses of Gaseous Substances
6. Derivation of Chemical Formulas. Calculations Involving Chemical Formulas and Equations
2. BASIC CLASSES OF INORGANIC COMPOUNDS
3 STRUCTURE OF THE ATOM. RADIOACTIVITY
1. Electronic Structure of Atoms. Dependence of Element Properties on the Structure of Their Atoms
2. Structure of Atomic Nuclei. Radioactivity. Nuclear Reactions
4 THE CHEMICAL BOND
1. Kinds of Chemical Bond. Ways of Forming a Covalent Bond
2. Molecular Polarities. Geometrical Structure of Molecules
3. Ionic Bond. Polarization of Ions
4. Hydrogen Bond. Intermolecular Interaction
5. FUNDAMENTAL LAWS OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS
1. Energy Conversions in Reactions. Thermochemical Calculations
2. Rate of a Chemical Reaction. Chemical Equilibrium
6. SOLUTIONS
1. Concentration of Solutions. Solubility
2. Energy Effects in the Formation of Solutions
3. Physicochemical Properties of Dilute Solutions of Non-Elecfrolyfes
7. SOLUTIONS OF ELECTROLYTES
1. Weak Electrolytes. Dissociation Constant and Degree of Dissociation
2. Strong Electrolytes. Activity of Ions
3. Ion Product of Water. pH
4. Solubility Product
5. Exchange Reactions in Electrolyte Solutions. Hydrolysis of Salts
8. OXIDATION-REDUCTION REACTIONS. FUNDAMENTALS OF ELECTROCHEMISTRY
1. Oxidation Number. Oxidation and Reduction
2. Oxidizing and Reducing Agents
3. Balancing Oxidafion-Reducfion Equations
4. Chemical Sources of Electrical Energy. Electrode Potentials
5. Direction of Oxidation-Reduction Reactions
6. Electrolysis
9. COMPLEX COMPOUNDS
1. Determining the Composition of a Complex Ion
2. Nomenclature of Complex Compounds
3. Equilibria in Solutions of Complex Compounds
10. GENERAL PROPERTIES OF METALS. ALLOYS
11. THE PERIODIC SYSTEMOF ELEMENTS. PROPERTIES OFELEMENTS AND THEIR COMPOUNDS
1. General
2. Hydrogen
3. The Halogens
4. Oxygen Subgroup Elements
5. Nitrogen Subgroup Elements
6. Carbon and Silicon
7. Group I Metals
8. Group II Metab. Water Hardness
9. Group III Elements
10. Metals of Groups IV, V, VI and VII
11. The Noble Gases. Group VIII Metals
Appendix
Table 1 Selected SI Units
Table 2 Conversion of Selected Non-System Units to SI Units
Table 3 Values of Selected Fundamental Physical Constants
Table 4 Names of Most Important Acids and Their Salts
Table 5 Standard Enthalpies of Formation
Table 6 Dissociation Constants of Selected Weak Electrolytes in Aqueous Solutions
Table 7 Activity Coefficients f of Ions at Different Ionic Strengths of Solution
Table 8 Solubility Products
Table 9 Standard Electrode Potentials
Table 10 Instability Constants of Selected Complex Ionsin Aqueous Solutions
Table 11 Atomic Masses to Four Significant Figures
MENDELEEV'S PERIODIC TABLE
Four-Place Logarithms
Answers to Problems
INDEX
Back Cover


๐Ÿ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES


Solving general chemistry problems
โœ R Nelson Smith; Willis Conway Pierce ๐Ÿ“‚ Library ๐Ÿ“… 1980 ๐Ÿ› W.H. Freeman ๐ŸŒ English

With the birth of the electronic hand calculator and the death of the slide rule, the teaching of general chemistry entered a new era. Unfortunately, the alculator did not bring automatic understanding of chemistry; analyzing and solving problems is just as difficult as ever. The need for detailed e

Solving General Chemistry Problems - Nel
โœ Robert Nelson Smith ๐Ÿ“‚ Library ๐Ÿ“… 1980 ๐Ÿ› W.H. Freeman & Company ๐ŸŒ English

With the birth of the electronic hand calculator and the death of the slide rule, the teaching of general chemistry entered a new era. Unfortunately, the alculator<br>did not bring automatic understanding of chemistry analyzing and solving problems is just as difficult as ever. The need for detailed

Symmetry-Adapted Basis Sets: Automatic G
โœ John Scales Avery, Sten Rettrup, James Emil Avery ๐Ÿ“‚ Library ๐Ÿ“… 2011 ๐Ÿ› World Scientific Publishing Company ๐ŸŒ English

In theoretical physics, theoretical chemistry and engineering, one often wishes to solve partial differential equations subject to a set of boundary conditions. This gives rise to eigenvalue problems of which some solutions may be very difficult to find. For example, the problem of finding eigenfunc