The most comprehensive textbook and detailed presentation of the lab techniques organic chemistry students need to know. Compatible with any organic chemistry lab manual or set of experiments, it combines specific instructions for three different kinds of laboratory glassware: miniscale, standard taper microscale, and Williamson microscale. This title provides effective support to all those looking for guided-inquiry and design-based experiments and projects, as well as for traditional lab experiments.This title is for organic students of all levels looking to improve and understand their knowledge of lab work. With new authors David Alberg and Gretchen Hofmeister on board for this fourth edition, both bring copious amounts of experience in organic chemistry. They have been able to revive the writing in the book, while also adding new examples and pitfalls for students to avoid.
Les mer
The most comprehensive textbook and detailed presentation of the lab techniques organic chemistry students need to know.
PART 1 Introduction to the Organic Laboratory ESSAY The Role of the Laboratory 1. Safety in the Laboratory.- 2. Green Chemistry.- 3. Laboratory Notebooks and Prelaboratory Information.- PART 2 Carrying Out Chemical Reactions ESSAY Learning to Do Organic Chemistry 4. Laboratory Glassware .- 5. Measurements and Transferring Reagents .- 6. Heating and Cooling Methods .- 7. Setting Up Organic Reactions .- 8. Computational Chemistry.- PART 3 Basic Methods for Separation, Purification, and Analysis  ESSAY Intermolecular Forces in Organic Chemistry 9. Filtration.- 10. Extraction .- 11. Drying Organic Liquids and Recovering Reaction Products.- 12. Boiling Points and Distillation.- 13. Refractometry.- 14. Melting Points and Melting Ranges.- 15. Recrystallization.- 16. Sublimation.- 17. Optical Activity and Enantiomeric Analysis.- PART 4 Chromatography ESSAY Modern Chromatographic Separations 18. Thin-Layer Chromatography.- 19. Liquid Chromatography.- 20. Gas Chromatography.- PART 5 Spectrometric Characterization Methods ESSAY The Spectrometric Revolution 21. Infrared Spectroscopy.- 22. Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy.- 23. 13C and Two-Dimensional NMR Spectroscopy.- 24. Mass Spectrometry.- 25. Ultraviolet and Visible Spectroscopy.- 26 . Integrated Spectrometry Problems.- PART 6 Designing and Carrying out Organic Experiments.- Essay Inquiry-Driven Lab Experiments 27. Designing Chemical Reactions.- 28. Using the Literature of Organic Chemistry.
Les mer
Periodic TableSpectra for Modern Projects and Experiments in Organic ChemistryTables of Unknowns and Derivativesnew_to_this_edition New Glassware Icons - The icons distinguish the three different types of glassware and make it easier for students to locate the information they needNew Part 6 Designing and Carrying Out Organic Experiments - Already a strength of the book, this part now includes expanded coverage of guided inquiry and more open-ended lab workIncreased Coverage of Acid-Base Chemistry in Part 3 - This edition gives students a stronger introduction to the acid-base chemistry that is important for understanding chemical reactions.
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781464134227
Publisert
2014
Utgave
4. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
W.H.Freeman & Co Ltd
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
178 mm
Aldersnivå
U, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
528

Biographical note

Jerry Mohrig spent his entire professional career as a college teacher. He retired in 2003 from Carleton College as Stark Professor in the Natural Sciences and Professor of Chemistry, Emeritus. Actively involved in science education reform for many years, Jerry was a founding member of the Council on Undergraduate Research (CUR) and of Project Kaleidoscope.
Gretchen Hofmeister earned her Ph.D. in synthetic chemistry from the University of California at Berkeley in 1990, after receiving a B.A. in chemistry from Carleton College. She was an NIH Postdoctoral Research Fellow with Professor Richard R. Schrock at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology before becoming a member of the faculty at Gustavus Adolphus College, earning tenure in 2002. 

Christina Hammond, retired, was Lecturer and Coordinator of Laboratory Instruction in the Chemistry Department at Vassar College from 1981 to 2006.  Hammond received a B.S. from the State University of New York at Albany, and came to Vassar in 1961 as a master’s degree student in chemistry and a graduate teaching assistant.