Recent Articles On Inorganic Chemisty


Encyclopedia of Inorganic Chemistry, Second Edition 10 Volume Set | Wiley | 2005 | ISBN: 0470860782 | 6696 pages | PDF | 129 MB
The first edition of the Encyclopedia of Inorganic Chemistry treated the elements of the periodic system in alphabetical order, with multiple entries for key elements. The articles from the First Edition were written more than 10 years ago and all areas of inorganic chemistry have seen such a vigorous development that it was necessary to update most articles and to add a considerable number of new articles. The result of this major work is the proud Encylopedia of Inorganic Chemistry Second Edition (EIC-2).
* New – now includes colour
* 30% growth on previous edition – now 6,640 pages, published in 10 volumes
EIC-2 continues to present articles in alphabetical order, but the content has been slightly reorganized to the following subject areas: Main Group Elements; Transition Metals and Coordination Chemistry; Organometallic Chemistry; Bioinorganic Chemistry; Solid State, Materials, Nanomaterials and Catalysis; and General Inorganic Chemistry, Theoretical and Computational Methods.
Library Journal
Organic chemistry is the study of materials containing carbon bonds. Inorganic chemistry is the study of the other 110 elements as well as areas of overlap, such as organometallic and nonmolecular compounds. The 1994 first edition of this work has been updated to reflect the enormous strides made in the field of inorganic chemistry and all its subdisciplines (e.g., computational and theoretical chemistry, transition metals, catalysis) throughout the last decade. King (chemistry, Univ. of Georgia) remains editor in chief and, though many of the original section editors have stayed on, several new ones have been recruited. Together they have compiled 285 signed A-to-Z main articles that deal with individual topics and 860 short entries (averaging a paragraph in length) that address important concepts. Many of the first edition's user-friendly features are repeated here: each volume contains a synopsis listing of main articles arranged by subdiscipline, followed by a complete table of contents for all the volumes (with the main articles in bold). Each volume's end papers feature a periodic table and a list of common abbreviations supplemented by abbreviations guides and glossaries at the beginning of some of the main articles. The tenth volume contains a comprehensive list of abbreviations, the names and affiliations of all the contributors, and a 222-page index. Like its predecessor, this second edition assumes a crucial place on the chemistry reference shelf: it is more in-depth than a single-volume dictionary (e.g., Facts On File's Dictionary of Inorganic Chemistry), more accessible than treatises (e.g., Elsevier's Comprehensive Organometallic Chemistry III and Comprehensive Coordination Chemistry II), and more focused than a general chemistry encyclopedia (e.g., Wiley's Van Nostrand's Encyclopedia of Chemistry). Bottom Line The main reason first edition owners would want to purchase this set would be to take advantage of new and updated material (including 25 main articles) as well as of updated bibliographies. Recommended for all college libraries and any comprehensive science reference collection.-Wade M. Lee, Univ. of Toledo Lib. Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.
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