Companion to Chemical Thermodynamics, Sixth Edition
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More About This Title Companion to Chemical Thermodynamics, Sixth Edition

English

Companion to Chemical Thermodynamics accompanies the newly published Chemical Thermodynamics, 6th Edition, a well-known upper-division undergraduate/graduate text on classical thermodynamics.

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Irving M. Klotz, PhD, deceased, was a noted expert in chemical thermodynamics and the physical chemistry of proteins. Dr. Klotz was elected to the American Academy of Arts & Sciences in 1968 and the National Academy of Sciences in 1970. He joined the Northwestern faculty in 1940 and retired in 1986. Dr. Klotz was named a Fellow of the Royal Society of Medicine in 1971 and published more than 200 scientific articles in peer-reviewed journals. He wrote Chemical Thermodynamics: Basic Theory and Methods in 1950. Dr. Rosenberg began working with him as coauthor with the third edition.

Robert M. Rosenberg, PhD, is Emeritus Professor of Chemistry at Lawrence University and an Adjunct Professor of Chemistry at Northwestern University.

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Chapter 2 Mathematical Preparation for Thermodynamics.

Chapter 3 The First Law of Thermodynamics.

Chapter 4 Enthalpy, Enthalpy of Reaction, and Heat Capacity.

Chapter 5 Application of the First Law to Gases.

Chapter 6 The Second Law of Thermodynamics.

Chapter 7 Equilibrium and Spontaneity for Systems at ConstantTemperature: The Gibbs, Helmholtz, Planck, and MassieuFunctions.

Chapter 8 Application of the Gibbs Function and the Planck Functionto Some Phase Changes.

Chapter 9 The Third Law of Thermodynamics.

Chapter 10 Application of the Gibbs and the Planck Function toChemical Changes.

Chapter 11 Thermodynamics of Systems of Variable Composition.

Chapter 12 Mixtures of Gases.

Chapter 13 The Phase Rule.

Chapter 14 The Ideal Solution.

Chapter 15 Dilute Solutions of Nonelectrolytes.

Chapter 16 Activities, Excess Gibbs Functions, and Standard Statesfor Nonelectrolytes.

Chapter 17 Determination of Nonelectrolyte Activities and ExcessGibbs Functions from Experimental Data.

Chapter 18 Calculation of Partial Molar Quantities and Excess MolarQuantities from Experimental Data: Volume And Enthalpy.

Chapter 19 Activity, Activity Coefficients, and OsmoticCoefficients of Strong Electrolytes.

Chapter 20 Changes in Gibbs Function for Processes InvolvingSolutions.

Chapter 21 Systems Subject to a Gravitational Field.

Chapter 22 Estimation of Thermodynamic Quantities.

Chapter 23 Practical Mathematical Techniques.

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"A solutions manual to accompany the textbook...intended for both instructors and students." (SciTech Book News, March 2001)
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