Skip to content

Chemistry

Best in textbook rentals since 2012!

ISBN-10: 0071283544

ISBN-13: 9780071283540

Edition: N/A

Authors: Martin Silberberg

List price: $85.33
Blue ribbon 30 day, 100% satisfaction guarantee!
what's this?
Rush Rewards U
Members Receive:
Carrot Coin icon
XP icon
You have reached 400 XP and carrot coins. That is the daily max!

This fifth edition contains many macroscopic to microscopic molecular illustrations, step-by-step worked exercises, and a range of problems which provide engaging applications covering engineering, medicine and materials.
Customers also bought

Book details

List price: $85.33
Publisher: McGraw Hill Higher Education
Size: 7.30" wide x 9.07" long x 1.43" tall
Weight: 4.246

The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change
Keys to the Study of Chemistry
The Components of Matter
Stoichiometry of Formulas and Equations
The Major Classes of Chemical Reactions
Gases and the Kinetic-Molecular Theory
Thermochemistry: Energy Flow and Chemical Change
Quantum Theory and Atomic Structure
Electron Configuration and Chemical Periodicity
Models of Chemical Bonding
The Shapes of Molecules
Theories of Covalent Bonding
Intermolecular Forces: Liquids, Solids, and Phase Changes
The Properties of Mixtures: Solutions and Colloids Interchapter: A Perspective on the Properties of the Elements
Periodic Patterns in the Main-Group Elements: Bonding, Structure, and Reactivity
Organic Compounds and the Atomic Properties of Carbon
Kinetics: Rates and Mechanisms of Chemical Reactions
Equilibrium: The Extent of Chemical Reactions
Acid-Base Equilibria
Ionic Equilibria in Aqueous Systems
Thermodynamics: Entropy, Free Energy, and the Direction of Chemical Reactions
Electrochemistry: Chemical Change and Electrical Work
The Elements in Nature and Industry
The Transition Elements and Their Coordination Compounds
Nuclear Reactions and Their Applications
Common Mathematical Operations in Chemistry
Standard Thermodynamic Values for Selected Substances at 298 K
Equilibrium Constants at 298 K
Standard Electrode (Half-Cell) Potentials at 298 K