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Exploring Chemical Analysis | 
enlarge | Author: Daniel C. Harris Publisher: W. H. Freeman Category: Book
Buy New: $62.00
New (30) from $62.00
Avg. Customer Rating: 9 reviews Sales Rank: 312533
Media: Paperback Edition: 4th Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 640 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.5 Dimensions (in): 9.9 x 7.9 x 1
ISBN: 1429201479 Dewey Decimal Number: 543 EAN: 9781429201476 ASIN: 1429201479
Publication Date: May 16, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description
Exploring Chemical Analysis provides an ideal one-term introduction to analytical chemistry for students whose primary interests generally lie outside of chemistry. Combining coverage of all major analytical topics with effective problem-solving methods, it teaches students how to understand analytical results and how to use quantitative manipulations, preparing them for the problems they will encounter in fields from biology to chemistry to geology.
The new edition includes new applications throughout, more emphasis on “green chemistry,” and more integration of Excel.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 4 more reviews...
GREAT September 16, 2008 Item arrived on time and in great shape and much cheaper than I would have had to pay at my university. Great transaction.
Analytical Chem Book February 15, 2008 This is a great product for the class that I am taking. It correlates very well with the class and is an excellent learning tool.
Great textbook, makes things interesting October 15, 2007 Analytical chemistry isn't really exciting...at all, but I surprisingly found this to be one of the most accessible textbooks I've ever had. The language is simple yet scientific and the author illustrates most concepts with practical, memorable examples. I compare this text to my math or physical chemistry textbooks and it's a world of difference. It's clear to me that an actual human being wrote this book and wants me to understand the material.
Great book.
Not quite comprehensive August 4, 2006 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
For the topics this book covers, it does so well. This includes MS, IR, titrations, etc... However, as one being trained as an analytical chemist (specifically mass spectrometrist), I feel compelled to note the complete absence of NMR material in the text. I consider NMR one of the most powerful analytical tools at a chemist's disposal. Hence, this text is good for those being introduced to analytical chem, but not for those looking for further study.
Great Analytical Chem book/Chem ref March 2, 2006 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
This book was a required text for my analytical chemistry class. I was at first a bit worried about it, I tend to be picky about chemistry textbooks, but I quickly fell in love with this one. The chapters are short and to the point (most between 20 and 30 pages). Harris tells you what you need to know and gives some good examples in those 20 pages. Other books I have had to use took in excess of 50 pages to describe what Harris does (much better at that) in under 30. This is a nice feature for the time pressured college student.
The formating is also really nice. At the end of each chapter, all of the equations discussed are printed with text telling what each variable is. This is nice for when working on problem sets as you don't have to flip throughout the chapter trying to find one relationship and then search for an hour finding out what each variable means (We all forget at least once). It also makes studying for the exams easier and proofing notes to make sure you have the right equations has never been easier.
The book is directed at either a chem or non-chemistry student. At most schools analytical is low enough to get non-chemistry or even science majors in it. This book walks this line rather well. It doesn't bore the students that are "really excited" about chemistry and it doesn't confuse the "normal" kids. It is easy to read and also, like mentioned before, has little jokes in it.
A few other minor things I liked were the sections on statstical analysis and the paper on which it was printed. I took a stats 100 level class while in highschool and I knew most of the stuff still. However, some parts I forgot and had to relearn. I had to do it for bio and for chem, the bio book and prof made it so boring and drawn out. Harris, on the other hand, jumps into it and makes math and stat analysis, almost, fun. The most minor of my comments is about the paper the book is printed on. A lot of textbooks are printed on overly gloss paper and filled with "look at this picture" images. Harris has color plates, but the majority of the book is composed of greens and blacks. The paper isn't glossy and light doesn't glare on it. This just makes the sitting down and reading part much easier on the eyes.
I would recommand this text for someone wanting to brush up on analytical chemistry, or even just general chemistry. I, as well as most of my peers, intend to keep it as a reference book because it is so well formated and written. In that way, it is almost hard to outgrow.
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