| Titre : |
Solutions Manual for Principles of Physical Chemistry |
| Type de document : |
texte imprimé |
| Auteurs : |
Hans Kuhn, Auteur ; David H. Waldeck, Auteur ; Horst-Dieter Forsterling, Auteur |
| Mention d'édition : |
3 édition |
| Editeur : |
Hoboken : Wiley |
| Année de publication : |
2024 |
| Importance : |
736p. |
| Présentation : |
ill en couleurs |
| Format : |
27x22cm. |
| ISBN/ISSN/EAN : |
978-1-119-85290-2 |
| Langues : |
Anglais (eng) |
| Mots-clés : |
Physical Chemistry |
| Index. décimale : |
540-74.1 |
| Résumé : |
This is a Solutions Manual to Accompany with solutions to the
exercises in the main volume of Principles of Physical Chemistry, Third
Edition.
This book provides a unique approach to introduce undergraduate students to
the concepts and methods of physical chemistry, which are the foundational
principles of Chemistry. The book introduces the student to the principles
underlying the essential sub-fields of quantum mechanics, atomic and
molecular structure, atomic and molecular spectroscopy, statistical
thermodynamics, classical thermodynamics, solutions and equilibria,
electrochemistry, kinetics and reaction dynamics, macromolecules, and
organized molecular assemblies. Importantly, the book develops and applies
these principles to supramolecular assemblies and supramolecular machines,
with many examples from biology and nanoscience. In this way, the book helps
the student to see the frontier of modern physical chemistry developments.
The book begins with a discussion of wave-particle duality and proceeds
systematically to more complex chemical systems in order to relate the story
of physical chemistry in an intellectually coherent manner. The topics are
organized to correspond with those typically given in each of a two course
semester sequence. The first 13 chapters present quantum mechanics and
spectroscopy to describe and predict the structure of matter: atoms,
molecules, and solids. Chapters 14 to 29 present statistical thermodynamics
and kinetics and applies their principles to understanding equilibria,
chemical transformations, macromolecular properties and supramolecular
machines. Each chapter of the book begins with a simplified view of a topic
and evolves to more rigorous description, in order to provide the student
(and instructor) flexibility to choose the level of rigor and detail that
suits them best. The textbook treats important new directions in physical
chemistry research, including chapters on macromolecules, principles of
interfaces and films for organizing matter, and supramolecular machines --
as well as including discussions of modern nanoscience, spectroscopy, and
reaction dynamics throughout the text.
|
| Note de contenu : |
figures;index |
Solutions Manual for Principles of Physical Chemistry [texte imprimé] / Hans Kuhn, Auteur ; David H. Waldeck, Auteur ; Horst-Dieter Forsterling, Auteur . - 3 édition . - [S.l.] : Hoboken : Wiley, 2024 . - 736p. : ill en couleurs ; 27x22cm. ISBN : 978-1-119-85290-2 Langues : Anglais ( eng)
| Mots-clés : |
Physical Chemistry |
| Index. décimale : |
540-74.1 |
| Résumé : |
This is a Solutions Manual to Accompany with solutions to the
exercises in the main volume of Principles of Physical Chemistry, Third
Edition.
This book provides a unique approach to introduce undergraduate students to
the concepts and methods of physical chemistry, which are the foundational
principles of Chemistry. The book introduces the student to the principles
underlying the essential sub-fields of quantum mechanics, atomic and
molecular structure, atomic and molecular spectroscopy, statistical
thermodynamics, classical thermodynamics, solutions and equilibria,
electrochemistry, kinetics and reaction dynamics, macromolecules, and
organized molecular assemblies. Importantly, the book develops and applies
these principles to supramolecular assemblies and supramolecular machines,
with many examples from biology and nanoscience. In this way, the book helps
the student to see the frontier of modern physical chemistry developments.
The book begins with a discussion of wave-particle duality and proceeds
systematically to more complex chemical systems in order to relate the story
of physical chemistry in an intellectually coherent manner. The topics are
organized to correspond with those typically given in each of a two course
semester sequence. The first 13 chapters present quantum mechanics and
spectroscopy to describe and predict the structure of matter: atoms,
molecules, and solids. Chapters 14 to 29 present statistical thermodynamics
and kinetics and applies their principles to understanding equilibria,
chemical transformations, macromolecular properties and supramolecular
machines. Each chapter of the book begins with a simplified view of a topic
and evolves to more rigorous description, in order to provide the student
(and instructor) flexibility to choose the level of rigor and detail that
suits them best. The textbook treats important new directions in physical
chemistry research, including chapters on macromolecules, principles of
interfaces and films for organizing matter, and supramolecular machines --
as well as including discussions of modern nanoscience, spectroscopy, and
reaction dynamics throughout the text.
|
| Note de contenu : |
figures;index |
|  |