Handbook of Preparative Inorganic Chemistry V2


Book Description

Handbook of Preparative Inorganic Chemistry, Volume 2, Second Edition focuses on the methods, mechanisms, and chemical reactions involved in conducting experiments on inorganic chemistry. Composed of contributions of various authors, the second part of the manual focuses on elements and compounds. Included in the discussions are copper, silver, and gold. Numerical calculations and diagrams are presented to show the properties, compositions, and chemical reactions of these materials when exposed to varying laboratory conditions. The manual also looks at other elements such as scandium, yttrium, titanium, zirconium, hafnium, and thorium. Lengthy discussions on the characteristics and nature of these elements are presented. The third part of the guidebook discusses special compounds. The manual also provides formula and subject index, including an index for procedures, materials, and devices. Considering the value of information presented, the manual can best serve the interest of readers and scientists wanting to institute a system in the conduct of experiments in laboratories.




Handbook of Preparative Inorganic Chemistry V1


Book Description

Handbook of Preparative Inorganic Chemistry, Volume 1, Second Edition focuses on the methods and mechanisms involved in conducting experiments on inorganic chemistry. Composed of contributions of various authors, the first part of the handbook focuses on special methods and devices for inorganic preparations. The materials mentioned include metals, plastics, pure solvents, and mercury. The text also looks at the importance of temperature and electrical discharges at the laboratory. The second part focuses on elements and compounds, hydrogen peroxide, and fluorine. Schematic diagrams and numerical representations are presented. The chemical reactions of these compounds when exposed to different laboratory conditions are analyzed through numerical representations and schematic diagrams. The handbook also presents lengthy discussions on the properties, compositions, and chemical responses of elements, compound, alkali metals, and earth metals. The formulas, reactions, and methodologies used in the experiments are presented. Considering the value of experiments contained, this manual is a valuable reference for readers interested in studying inorganic chemistry.




Handbook of Preparative Inorganic Chemistry


Book Description

Preparative methods. Elements and compounds. Hydrogen, deuterium, water. Hydrogen peroxide. Fluorine, hydrogen fluoride. Fluorine compounds. Chlorine, bromine, iodine. Oxygen, ozone. Sulfur, selenium, tellurium. Nitrogen. Phosphorus. Arsenic, antimony, bismuth. Carbon. Silicon and germanium. Tin and lead. Boron. Aluminum. Gallium, indium, thallium. Alkaline earth metals. Alkali metals. Copper, silver, gold. Zinc, cadmium, mercury. Scandium, yttrium, rare earths. Titanium, zirconium, hafnium, thorium. Vanadium, niobium, tantalum. Chromium, molybdenum, tungsten, uranium. Manganese. Rhenium. Iron. Cobalt, nickel. The platinum metals. Adsorbents and catalysts. Hydroxo salts. Iso - and heteropoly acids and their salts. Carbonyl and nitrosyl compounds. Alloys and intermetallic compounds.




The Cumulative Book Index


Book Description

A world list of books in the English language.




Pd Palladium


Book Description

With platinum and rhodium, palladium is one of the most important members of the platinum metal group. The last Gmelin treatment of it was in 1942, and knowledge of its properties and chemistry has made enormous strides since then. This volume is primarily concerned with binary compounds and with the coordination complexes derived from them. Although it is a member of the nickel-palladium-platinum triad, it more closely resernblas platinum in its binary and coordination chemistry, though being a second-row transition element it displays less tendency than does platinum to assume higher oxidation states. ln heterogeneous and homogeneous catalysis, referred to at appropriate points, palladium and its complexes are of great importance in bulk and fine chemieals production, effecting a wide variety of organic transformations. The arrangement of material in this volume follows the traditional Gmelin arrangement. Within each category of compounds or complexes the material is arranged, as usual, in order of ascending metal oxidation states (e. g., palladium(ll) precedes palladium(IV)). The chemistry of the palladium-hydrogen system is so large that it merits a separate volume, so this book starts with the binary oxides and oxopalladates followed by hydroxides, hydroxo complexes and aquo complexes. Then nitrides and nitrates are treated. They are followed by the large chapters on halides and their complexes (172 pages). The largest single chapter in this volume (11 0 pages) deals with chlorides, chloropalladates and other chloro complexes.













Contributions


Book Description

Contains reprints of articles published by members of the department.