Sunday, February 24, 2008
Physical Chemistry: Understanding our Chemical World by Paul M. S. Monk
Product Description
Understanding Physical Chemistry is a gentle introduction to the principles and applications of physical chemistry. The book aims to introduce the concepts and theories in a structured manner through a wide range of carefully chosen examples and case studies drawn from everyday life. These real-life examples and applications are presented first, with any necessary chemical and mathematical theory discussed afterwards. This makes the book extremely accessible and directly relevant to the reader.
Aimed at undergraduate students taking a first course in physical chemistry, this book offers an accessible applications/examples led approach to enhance understanding and encourage and inspire the reader to learn more about the subject.
A comprehensive introduction to physical chemistry starting from first principles.
Carefully structured into short, self-contained chapters.
Introduces examples and applications first, followed by the necessary chemical theory.
Product Details
Amazon Sales Rank: #767114 in Books
Published on: 2004-05-28
Number of items: 1
Binding: Paperback
618 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
"…a physical chemistry textbook that is interesting, easy to read, and makes the subject comprehensible is overdue…[this book] achieves this goal and does so quire well." (Journal of Chemical Education, May 2006)
"…Monk has a deep understanding of many of the thorny issues in physical chemistry and is able to avoid the unnecessary mystery that plagues other texts." (Clinical Chemistry, June 2005)
“…an original, refreshing and valuable approach to a complicated subject.” (Chemistry and Industry, No.17, 6th September 2004)
Download Description
Understanding Physical Chemistry is a gentle introduction to the principles and applications of physical chemistry. The book aims to introduce the concepts and theories in a structured manner through a wide range of carefully chosen examples and case studies drawn from everyday life. These real-life examples and applications are presented first, with any necessary chemical and mathematical theory discussed afterwards. This makes the book extremely accessible and directly relevant to the reader. Aimed at undergraduate students taking a first course in physical chemistry, this book offers an accessible applications/examples led approach to enhance understanding and encourage and inspire the reader to learn more about the subject. A comprehensive introduction to physical chemistry starting from first principles. Carefully structured into short, self-contained chapters. Introduces examples and applications first, followed by the necessary chemical theory.
Book Info
Introductory text provides the principles and applications of physical chemistry, illustrating basic concepts with real-life examples and case studies. For undergraduate students. DLC: Chemistry, Physical and theoretical.
Customer Reviews
It is what it is
This book is everything it says it is. I am in school to be a chem teacher and P chem has been mind boggling. The many examples gets a person into thinking like a p chemists and this is invaluable when trying to set up the math problems in an acutal class. If you understand your Calc the math isn't the issue in passing p chem its setting up the math. This book is a must read for any under grad chemist. I am going to write the author this book is a master piece. Simple and to the point with lots of real world examples.
Good for a low level intro course
This book does a great job at discribing the conceptual aspects of basic p.chem topics like thermodynaics, kinectics and photochemistry. Unfortuently it only breafly explaines the mathmatical aspects and in little detail, making the book unsutible for anythig except a low level class. The book also suffers from a severe lack of practice problems. If you only need to understad the basic concepts of p.chem this book cannot be beat, but if you need to know the nitty gritty mathmatical deatials you will be hurting at test time.
Labels:
Chemistry