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Chemical Principles in the Laboratory

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ISBN-10: 0495112887

ISBN-13: 9780495112884

Edition: 9th 2009 (Revised)

Authors: Emil Slowinski, Wayne C. Wolsey, William L. Masterton

List price: $244.95
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Succeed in chemistry with CHEMICAL PRINCIPLES IN THE LABORATORY, Eigth Edition! Clear, user-friendly, and direct, this lab manual provides you with the tools you need to successfully complete lab experiments and lab reports. Analyzing the data you observe in the lab sessions is easy with the Advance Study Assignments, found throughout the manual, that give you extra practice with processing data through sample questions.
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Book details

List price: $244.95
Edition: 9th
Copyright year: 2009
Publisher: Brooks/Cole
Publication date: 3/11/2008
Binding: Comb Bound 
Pages: 400
Size: 9.00" wide x 10.75" long x 1.00" tall
Weight: 2.046
Language: English

Emil J. Slowinski is an Emeritus DeWitt Wallace Professor of Chemistry at Macalester College. He earned a B.S. degree from Massachusetts State College in 1946, and a Ph.D. in physical chemistry from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1949. He taught at Swarthmore College, 1949-1952; the University of Connecticut, 1952-1964; and Macalester College, 1964-1988. His sabbatical leaves were at Oxford University in 1960, and the University of Warsaw in 1968. He is a co-author, with Bill Masterton and/or Wayne Wolsey, of more than 25 books on various areas of general chemistry. He is retired, but has continued his writing with new editions of the laboratory manual.

Wayne C. Wolsey, an inorganic chemist, received his B.S. from Michigan State University in 1958 and his Ph.D. from the University of Kansas in 1962. He joined the Macalester College faculty in 1965, and is now in "semi-retirement." His last three sabbaticals were spent at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory. In 2001-2002, he investigated various complexing agents for their effectiveness in dissolving calcium oxalate kidney stones, in collaboration with a former student, now a urologist. He has received various awards, including the Minnesota College Science Teacher of the Year in 1989; Macalester's Thomas Jefferson Award in 1993; designation as a MegaMole contributor to Minnesota Chemical…    

William L. Masterton received his PhD in physical chemistry from the University of Illinois in 1953. Two years later he began to work at the University of Connecticut, where he taught general chemistry and a graduate course in chemical thermodynamics. He has received numerous teaching awards, including an award from the Student Senate at the University of Connecticut, of which he was most proud. Dr. Masterton is co-author of the all-time best-selling general chemistry textbook CHEMICAL PRINCIPLES, which has sold well over 1.5 million copies. Dr. Masterton's field of research, solution thermodynamics, prepared him well for making maple syrup each March at the family farmhouse in New…    

The Densities of Liquids and Solids
Resolution of Matter into Pure Substances
Paper Chromatography
Resolution of Matter into Pure Substances
Fractional Crystallization
Determination of a Chemical Formula
Identification of a Compound by Mass Relationships
Properties of Hydrates
Analysis of an Unknown Chloride
Verifying the Absolute Zero of Temperature: Determination of the Barometric Pressure
Molar Mass of a Volatile Liquid
Analysis of an Aluminum-Zinc Alloy
The Atomic Spectrum of Hydrogen
The Alkaline Earths and the Halogens: Two Families in the Periodic Table
The Geometrical Structure of Molecules: An Experiment Using Molecular Models
Heat Effects and Calorimetry
Vapor Pressure and Heat of Vaporization of Liquids
The Structure of Crystals -- An Experiment Using Models
Classification of Chemical Substances
Some Nonmetals and Their Compounds -- Preparations and Properties
Molar Mass Determination by Depression of the Freezing Point
Rates of Chemical Reactions
The Iodination of Acetone
Rates of Chemical Reactions
A Clock Reaction
Properties of Systems in Chemical Equilibrium -- Le Chatelier's Principle
Determination of the Equilibrium Constant for a Chemical Reaction
The Standardization of a Basic Solution and the Determination of the Molar Mass of an Acid
pH Measurements: Buffers and Their Properties
Determination of the Solubility Product of PbI2
Relative Stabilities of Complex Ions and Precipitates Prepared from Solutions of Copper(II)
Determination of the Hardness of Water
Synthesis and an Analysis of a Coordination Compound
Determination of Iron by Reaction with Permanganate -- A Redox Titration
Determination of an Equivalent Mass by Electrolysis
Voltaic Cell Measurements
Preparation of Copper(I) Chloride
Development of a Scheme for Qualitative Analysis
Spot Tests for Some Common Anions
Qualitative Analysis of Group I Cations
Qualitative Analysis of Group II Cations
Qualitative Analysis of Group III Cations
Identification of a Pure Ionic Solid
The Ten Test Tube Mystery
Preparation of Aspirin
Rate Studies on the Decomposition of Aspirin
Analysis for Vitamin C
Vapor Pressure of Water
Summary of Solubility Properties of Ions and Solids
Table of Atomic Masses (Based on Carbon-12)
Making Measurements-Laboratory Techniques
Mathematical Considerations-Making Graphs
Suggested Locker Equipment
Suggestions for Extension of the Experiments to "Real World Problems"