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The Law of Mass Action (Hardcover, 2001 ed.): Andrei B. Koudriavtsev, Reginald F. Jameson, Wolfgang Linert The Law of Mass Action (Hardcover, 2001 ed.)
Andrei B. Koudriavtsev, Reginald F. Jameson, Wolfgang Linert
R1,771 Discovery Miles 17 710 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

The theoretical basis of this book is developed ab ovo. This requires dealing with several problems arising in physical chemistry including the concept of entropy as a thermodynamic coordinate and its relation to probability. Thus Maxwell Boltzmann and Gibbs statistical thermodynamics, and quantum statistics are made considerable use of. A statistical mechanical derivation of the law of mass action for gases and solids is presented, and the problems arising in the application of the law of mass action to the liquid state are addressed. Molecular interactions and how to take them into account when deriving the law of mass action is discussed in some detail sketching a way alternativ to the use of activities. Finally, attention is drawn to the statistical mechanical background to Linear Free Energy Relationships (LFER's) and of Isokinetic Relationships (IKR's) and their connections with molecular interactions.

The Law of Mass Action (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2001): Andrei B. Koudriavtsev, Reginald F.... The Law of Mass Action (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2001)
Andrei B. Koudriavtsev, Reginald F. Jameson, Wolfgang Linert
R1,614 Discovery Miles 16 140 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

'Why are atoms so small?' asks 'naive physicist' in Erwin Schrodinger's book 'What is Life? The Physical Aspect of the Living Cell'. 'The question is wrong' answers the author, 'the actual problem is why we are built of such an enormous number of these particles'. The idea that everything is built of atoms is quite an old one. It seems that l Democritus himself borrowed it from some obscure Phoenician source . The arguments for the existence of small indivisible units of matter were quite simple. 2 According to Lucretius observable matter would disappear by 'wear and tear' (the world exists for a sufficiently long, if not infinitely long time) unless there are some units which cannot be further split into parts. th However, in the middle of the 19 century any reference to the atomic structure of matter was considered among European physicists as a sign of extremely bad taste and provinciality. The hypothesis of the ancient Greeks (for Lucretius had translated Epicurean philosophy into Latin hexameters) was at that time seen as bringing nothing positive to exact science. The properties of gaseous, liquid and solid bodies, as well as the behaviour of heat and energy, were successfully described by the rapidly developing science of thermodynamics.

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