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Physical Chemistry: A Molecular Approach | 
| Authors: Donald A. Mcquarrie, John D. Simon Publisher: University Science Books Category: Book
List Price: $99.00 Buy New: $79.20 You Save: $19.80 (20%)
New (16) Used (22) from $70.00
Avg. Customer Rating: 31 reviews Sales Rank: 9635
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 1360 Shipping Weight (lbs): 5.2 Dimensions (in): 10.3 x 7.2 x 2.5
ISBN: 0935702997 Dewey Decimal Number: 541 EAN: 9780935702996 ASIN: 0935702997
Publication Date: July 1997 Availability: In stock soon. Order now to get in line. First come, first served.
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| Editorial Reviews:
Book Description As the first modern physical chemistry textbook to cover quantum mechanics before thermodynamics and kinetics, this book provides a contemporary approach to the study of physical chemistry. By beginning with quantum chemistry, students will learn the fundamental principles upon which all modern physical chemistry is built. The text includes a special set of "MathChapters" to review and summarize the mathematical tools required to master the material Thermodynamics is simultaneously taught from a bulk and microscopic viewpoint that enables the student to understand how bulk properties of materials are related to the properties of individual constituent molecules. This new text includes a variety of modern research topics in physical chemistry as well as hundreds of worked problems and examples.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 26 more reviews...
Pchem June 18, 2008 It's great. It's quite in depth, though you have to accept some parts of the math if you don't already know differential equations. It's understandable even to me, and the last chem course I took was just AP, but it's also very challenging and in depth. Highly recommend.
Who could I turn to? March 22, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
For those students who are REQUIRED to derive everything on their PCHM exams, THIS IS THE BOOK FOR YOU! Excellent supplement to that weak and required text book of yours, for sure. Good luck! PCHMI (Thermo-C) PCHMII (Q. Mechanics-B)
A Third-Rate Book at Best October 6, 2007 3 out of 9 found this review helpful
This is one of the poorest textbooks I've ever owned. It is wordy yet it explains very little. And there is one really annoying aspect to this book: The authors only ever introduce an equation once in the text. From thereon, they refer to that equation as "equation 17-1" or whatever number they designate it. So you're constantly having to turn back pages and entire chapters just to find out what stupid equation they are talking about. They also embed all the important tables within random chapters instead of being in an appendix, so good luck finding any constants or any other figures that would be put in a table. Another bad thing about this book is that they made an update to it and added two chapters but didn't change the ISBN. So some people get the newer version with the correct number of chapters and some people will pay the same price for the book missing at least 2 chapters that they will need in their p-chem class (this happened to my girlfriend who has the older book and I have the newer one and we didn't discover this until the fourth test!). I hate this book with a passion. It has crappy black and white illustrations,and instead of writing fractions like ft/sec or mol/L they write ft*sec(-1) and mol*L(-1) and it gets quite distracting when they have several terms in the denominator. It looks like it was written in the 70's. I will say as a side-note that it's very much worth getting the solutions manual if you get this book. The solutions manual is pretty well-done.
Physical Chemistry: A Molecular Approach October 5, 2007 0 out of 13 found this review helpful
I received the correct book in excellent condition (matching the seller's description) in the timeframe I was told when I purchased it.
Setting the standard for other physical chemistry texts July 28, 2007 4 out of 6 found this review helpful
To be succinct: 1) Thorough explanation of each subject. 2) Subjects broken down into manageable chapters. 3) Lots of worked problems. 4) Lots of problems at the end of each chapter. 5) Material presented in a logical, not necessarily historical, fashion. 6) Layout is generally superior to other texts (spacious, not cramped) 7) Get the solutions manual.
Bear in mind most schools teach thermodynamics and kinetics, followed by quantum chemistry. This methodology is merely a reflection of the order of discovery, and not because quantum chemistry necessarily builds on thermo or kinetics. This text teaches quantum first, followed by thermo and kinetics. It's more logical to teach quantum first, but you can jump right into traditional physical chemistry with this text.
Only recommendation: The publisher should package the book with the solutions manual. I'm a big fan of solutions manuals and a student is somewhat hobbled without one.
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