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Organic Chemistry Simplified 3rd Edition (Hardcover, 3rd Ed.)
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Organic Chemistry Simplified 3rd Edition (Hardcover, 3rd Ed.)
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Contents - PART 1 - The Unique Position of the Carbon Atom in
Chemistry - 1. The Nature of Organic Chemistry - 2. The Organic
Chemist Looks at a Molecule - 3. Valence - 4. New Ideas on Valence
- 5. The Unique Position of Carbon among the Elements - 6. The O C
T E T in Chemistry - 7. The D U E T in Chemistry - 8. North and
South Poles - PART 2 - The Architecture of Carbon Compounds - 9.
Methane and the Structure Theory - 10. Carbon Chains - 11. Carbon
Rings - 12. Morphology of Chain and Ring Compounds - 13. Double and
Triple Bonds - 14. Energy and Molecular Structure - 15. PI
Electrons - 16. Bond Energies and Resonance - 17. How Molecules
React - 18. Why Molecules React - 19. The Benzene Ring - 20.
Nuclear Reactions - 21. The Geography of the Benzene Ring - 22.
Stereochemistry and Isomerism - PART 3 - The Classification of
Carbon Compounds - 23. The Common Methods of Classification in
Organic Chemistry - 24. Halogen Compounds and Free Radicals - 25.
Alcohols, Phenols, and Ethers - 26. Aldehydes and Ketones - 27.
Carboxylic Acids - 28. Mixed Oxygen Compounds - 29. Nitrogen
Compounds - 30. Compounds with Sulphur, Phosphorus, and Other
Elements - PART 4 - Special Topics in Organic Chemistry - 31.
Structures of Complex Compounds - 32. Aromatic Character in
Heterocycles and Condensed Cycles - 33. Proteins - 34.
Carbohydrates - 35. Chemistry in Plant and Animal Life - 36. Dyes -
37. Isotopic Chemistry - 38. Giant Molecules - Supplementary
Reading - Index - Preface - When Dr. Frank C. Whitmore was
president of the American Chemical Society in 1938 and made the
customary tour of local ACS sections, he used that occasion to
spread the gospel of the electron theory of valence. At one of his
lectures the author of this book sat in the audience among a mixed
group of chemists consisting of technicians, students, and college
graduates. The lack of familiarity of organic chemists with the
electron was so obvious that it aroused in the author an urge to
write an elementary introduction to organic chemistry in which the
role of the electron would be emphasized. This book is especially
intended to serve two groups of readers: those engaged in work of a
chemical nature who are not able to take a classroom course in
organic chemistry, and those in a college course who find they have
a need for a supplementary book to help clarify the approach to
modern organic chemistry. In other words, the book was conceived as
an integrated introduction to both electron-valence theory and
organic chemistry at a level suitable for self-study. The first
edition of this book appeared in 1943 during World War II. A second
edition, much enlarged, was published in 1955. For this third
edition the book has been extensively rewritten, and more than
enough material has been added so that it can serve as a textbook
for a one-year college course. The novel arrangement of the subject
matter in the earlier editions has been maintained. A teacher who
prefers to lecture largely from his own notes should find no
difficulty incorporating his material into the simple plan on which
this book is based.
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