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| Matter and Life | |
| Chemistry: The Central Science | |
| States of Matter | |
| Classification of Matter | |
| An Example of a Chemical Reaction | |
| Chemical Elements and Symbols | |
| Elements and the Periodic Table | |
| Measurements in Chemistry | |
| Physical Quantities | |
| Measuring Mass | |
| Measuring Length and Volume | ... MORE|
| Measurement and Significant Figures | |
| Scientific Notation | |
| Rounding Off Numbers | |
| Problem Solving: Converting a Quantity from One Unit to Another | |
| Problem Solving: Estimating Answers | |
| Measuring Temperature | |
| Energy and Heat | |
| Density | |
| Specific Gravity | |
| Atoms and the Periodic Table | |
| Atomic Theory | |
| Elements and Atomic Number | |
| Isotopes and Atomic Weight | |
| The Periodic Table | |
| Some Characteristics of Different Groups | |
| Electronic Structure of Atoms | |
| Electron Configurations | |
| Electron Configurations and the Periodic Table | |
| Electron-Dot Symbols | |
| Ionic Compounds | |
| Ions | |
| Periodic Properties and Ion Formation | |
| Ionic Bonds | |
| Some Properties of Ionic Compounds | |
| Ions and the Octet Rule | |
| Ions of Some Common Elements | |
| Naming Ions | |
| Polyatomic Ions | |
| Formulas of Ionic Compounds | |
| Naming Ionic Compounds | |
| And Ions: An Introduction to Acids and Bases | |
| Molecular Compounds | |
| Covalent Bonds | |
| Covalent Bonds and the Periodic Table | |
| Multiple Covalent Bonds | |
| Coordinate Covalent Bonds | |
| Molecular Formulas and Lewis Structures | |
| Drawing Lewis Structures | |
| The Shapes of Molecules | |
| Polar Covalent Bonds and Electronegativity | |
| Polar Molecules | |
| Naming Binary Molecular Compounds | |
| Characteristics of Molecular Compounds | |
| Chemical Reactions: Classification and Mass Relationships | |
| Chemical Equations | |
| Balancing Chemical Equations | |
| Avogadrorsquo;s Number and the Mole | |
| Gramndash;Mole Conversions | |
| Mole Relationships and Chemical Equations | |
| Mass Relationships and Chemical Equations | |
| Limiting Reagent and Percent Yield | |
| Classes of Chemical Reactions | |
| Precipitation Reactions and Solubility Guidelines | |
| Acids, Bases, and Neutralization Reactions | |
| Redox Reactions | |
| Recognizing Redox Reactions | |
| Net Ionic Equations | |
| Chemical Reactions: Energy, Rates, and Equilibrium | |
| Energy and Chemical Bonds | |
| Heat Changes during Chemical Reactions | |
| Exothermic and Endothermic Reactions | |
| Why Do Chemical Reactions Occur? Free Energy | |
| How Do Chemical Reactions Occur? Reaction Rates | |
| Effects o<$$$> | |
| Table of Contents provided by Publisher. All Rights Reserved. |
John McMurry: educated at Harvard and Columbia, has taught approximately 17,000 students in general and organic chemistry over a 30-year period. A Professor of Chemistry at Cornell University since 1980, Dr. McMurry previously spent 13 years on the faculty at the University of California at Santa Cruz. He has received numerous awards, including the Alfred P. Sloan Fellowship (1969–71), the National Institute of Health Career Development Award (1975–80), the Alexander von Humboldt Senior Scientist Award (1986–87), and the Max Planck Research Award (1991).
Dr. David S. Ballantine, Jr., received his B.S. in Chemistry in 1977 from the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg, VA., and his Ph.D. in Chemistry in 1983 from the University of Maryland at College Park. After several years as a researcher at the Naval Research Labs in Washington DC he joined the faculty in the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry of Northern Illinois University, where he has been a professor for the past twenty years. He was awarded the Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching Award in 1998, and was recently named the departmental Director of Undergraduate Studies. In addition, he is the faculty advisor to the NIU Chemistry Club, an ACS Student Affiliate program.
Carl A. Hoeger received his BS in Chemistry from San Diego State Unversity and his Ph.D. in Organic Chemistry from the University of Wisconsin, Madison in 1983. After a postdoctoral stint at the University of California, Riverside, he joined the Peptide Biology Laboratory at the Salk Institute in 1985 where he ran the NIH Peptide Facility while doing basic research in the development of peptide agonists and antagonists. During this time he also taught general, organic, and biochemistry at San Diego City College, Palomar College, and Miramar College. He joined the teaching faculty at UCSD in 1998. Dr. Hoeger has been teaching chemistry to undergraduates for over 20 years, where he continues to explore the use of technology in the classroom. In 2004 he won the Paul and Barbara Saltman Distinguished Teaching Award from UCSD. His is currently the General Chemistry coordinator at UCSD, where he is also responsible for the training and guidance of the Chemistry and Biochemistry departments’ 100 + teaching assistants.
Dr. Virginia E. Peterson received her B.S. in Chemistry in 1967 from the University of Washington in Seattle, and her Ph.D. in Biochemistry in 1980 from the University of Maryland at College Park. Between her undergraduate and graduate years she worked in lipid, diabetes and heart disease research at Stanford University. Following her Ph.D. she took a position in the Biochemistry Department at the University of Missouri in Columbia, and is an Associate Professor. Currently she is the Director of Undergraduate Advising for the department and teaches both senior capstone classes and biochemistry classes for non-science majors. Awards include both the college level and the university-wide Excellence in Teaching Award and, in 2006, the University’s Outstanding Advisor Award and the State of Missouri Outstanding University Advisor Award. Dr. Peterson believes in public service and in 2003 received the Silver Beaver Award for service from the Boy Scouts of America.