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OTHER INTERSCIENCE BOOKS OF RELATED INTEREST
Analytical Toxicology of Industrial Inorganic Poisons
By MORRIS B. JACOBS, late Professor of Occupational Medicine, School of Public Health and Administrative Medicine, Columbia University.
Based on the author's world-renowned Analytical Chemistry of Industrial Poisons, Hazards, and Solvents, this book takes into account new problems and new methods so as to make this a completely new book rather than a revision of the older book.
{Chemical Analysis—Vol. 22)
Reflectance Spectroscopy
By WESLEY WM. WENDLANDT and HARRY G. HECHT, both of Texas Technological College.
Treats the theory of reflectance spectroscopy in detail and provides thorough descriptions of the instruments involved. Both industrial and research applications are discussed, including reflectance spectra of inorganic compounds, surface studies, high temperature reflectance, and color measurements.
(Chemical Analysis- Vol. 21) 298 pages.
Amperometric Titrations
By...
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Fülszöveg
OTHER INTERSCIENCE BOOKS OF RELATED INTEREST
Analytical Toxicology of Industrial Inorganic Poisons
By MORRIS B. JACOBS, late Professor of Occupational Medicine, School of Public Health and Administrative Medicine, Columbia University.
Based on the author's world-renowned Analytical Chemistry of Industrial Poisons, Hazards, and Solvents, this book takes into account new problems and new methods so as to make this a completely new book rather than a revision of the older book.
{Chemical Analysis—Vol. 22)
Reflectance Spectroscopy
By WESLEY WM. WENDLANDT and HARRY G. HECHT, both of Texas Technological College.
Treats the theory of reflectance spectroscopy in detail and provides thorough descriptions of the instruments involved. Both industrial and research applications are discussed, including reflectance spectra of inorganic compounds, surface studies, high temperature reflectance, and color measurements.
(Chemical Analysis- Vol. 21) 298 pages.
Amperometric Titrations
By JOHN T. STOCK, University of Connecticut.
A comprehensive treatment of the theory, practice, and applications of amperometric titrimetry and related techniques. Discussion of the theory is followed by a clear description of the apparatus and general techniques. About two-thirds of the book is devoted to applications and the procedures for carrying these out.
(Chemical Analysis-Vol. 20) 730 pages.
Methods of Quantitative Inorganic Analysis
An Encyclopedia of Gravimetric, Titrimetric and Colorimetric Methods
By KAZUNOBU KODAMA, Nagoya Municipal Industrial Research Institute, Nagoya, Japan.
Brings together all published methods in the field of inorganic gravimetric, titrimetric and colorimetric analysis. Comprehensive data have been compiled, for example, about 100 colorimetric procedures for iron that will be of value to all analytical chemists. The whole field has been concentrated and compressed into this comparatively small volume, and therefore it has proved essential to employ formulas and abbreviation wherever possible; the system familiar to readers of Chemical Abstracts has been followed. .507 pages.
Interscience Publishers
a division of JOHN WILEY & SONS New York • London • Sydney
About the book
An integrated study of the features of precipitation, nucleation, growth, coprecipitation, surface properties and multi-component systems from as quantitative a viewpoint as possible. Recent experimental and theoretical advances have enabled formulation of a quantitative approach to the mechanism of precipitate formation and development. Until the last decade or so, most information in the literature has only been of a qualitative nature.
The book is directed toward those interested in the mechanism of precipitation from solution, whether it be in analytical or physical chemistry, physiology or geophysics, some examples being explored from each of these areas. The formation and properties of precipitates are regarded as interrelated phenomena which only become more or less intelligible when treated together.
RF-0637
ALAN G. WALTON
has been Associate Professor of Chemistry, Department of Chemistry, Case Institute of Technology (now Case and Western Reserve University), Cleveland, Ohio since i960. He also directs Case-Western Reserve's new Biomedical Physics Group. From 1962 to 1966 he was Assistant Professor of Chemistry at the same institute and from I960 to 1962 he was a Research Associate at Indiana University. He holds a B.Sc (1957) and a Ph.D. (i960) from Nottingham University, England. He is an Associate of the Royal Institute of Chemistry (London) and a Member of the Faraday Society. In 1965 he organized the International Symposium on Nucleation Phenomena (Cleveland). He is also Consultant to E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company.
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