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Chemistry: A Molecular Approach (MasteringChemistry Series) | 
enlarge | Author: Nivaldo Jose Tro Publisher: Prentice Hall Category: Book
List Price: $186.80 Buy Used: $75.99 You Save: $110.81 (59%)
New (47) Used (71) from $75.99
Rating: 4 reviews Sales Rank: 61075
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1 Pages: 1081 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 5.8 Dimensions (in): 10.9 x 8.6 x 1.7
ISBN: 0131000659 Dewey Decimal Number: 540 EAN: 9780131000650 ASIN: 0131000659
Publication Date: December 1, 2006 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description
For two-semester or three-quarter courses in General Chemistry. The author’s goal in writing this book is to deliver the depth of coverage faculty want with the accessibility and clarity that students need for success. Nivaldo J. Tro’s Chemistry: A Molecular Approach explains difficult chemical concepts in a concise and clear student-centered manner while also providing faculty with the flexibility to go more deeply into many key, often neglected topics, such as electron diffraction, molecular orbital theory, and free-energy changes under non-standard conditions. Chemistry is presented visually throughmulti-level images (macroscopic, molecular and symbolic representations), which helps students see the connections among the formulas (symbolic), the world around them (macroscopic), and the atoms and molecules that make up the world (molecular). Every aspect of this book focuses students on recognizing that the behavior of matter is based on the behavior of atoms and molecules.
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| Customer Reviews:
Chem Book is Awesome October 15, 2008 A. Fain (Brooklyn, NY USA) 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
This book is in great shape. It came very fast. I had no problems. You should always buy items from the buyer.
Not good August 22, 2008 Flavia Vieira Ferreira (USA) 0 out of 2 found this review helpful
My whole class did not like the book. I deeeply regret paying so much for it. It's pretty confusing and it has little examples on how to solve the problems.
?? November 5, 2007 J. Collins (Folsom, CA) 0 out of 17 found this review helpful
They were out of stock so my order was cancelled. I did received my refund in a timely manner.
An engaging and well organized new text for general chemistry January 23, 2007 Craig Matteson (Ann Arbor, MI) 20 out of 21 found this review helpful
This is a new textbook for general chemistry. Yes, there a quite a number of general chemistry texts and they all cover roughly the same general material. They differ more in how they organize the material, illustrate it, and their method of helping the student develop a solid understanding and command of this basic material. The student not only needs to learn the basic facts of chemistry, she needs to learn how to think about it so when she looks at the world, she can see and understand the issues as they relate to this vital science. Dr. Tro begins this book by explaining how the text was developed and provides instructions for the student on how to make the most of the book. I liked this a great deal. He starts the book by providing what he thinks is the most important scientific idea in all of human knowledge: "the properties of matter are determined by the properties of molecules and atoms". From there he builds all the principles taught in general chemistry. He also define chemistry as: "the science that seeks to understand the behavior of matter by studying the behavior of atoms and molecules". Each chapter is organized in a similar fashion and a great deal of emphasis is placed on making the illustrations demonstrate a principle - a process - rather than an isolated picture. Tro also has interesting articles of chemistry in various fields in different chapters and he often introduces ideas with practical issues that will likely matter to the student. For review, at the end of each chapter he goes over the key concepts taught, the key equations and relationships discussed, and the key skills that the student is expected to have learned. He provides exercises to test one's mastery of the material that the student can answer for himself. The problems are organized by chapter topic. Those listed with blue numbers have answers provided in the back of the book. There are also cumulative problems that build on skills learned previously, challenge problems, and conceptual problems that go a bit further than the minimum requirements of chapter mastery. Besides Appendix III with selected answers, there are others with key equations, useful data, and a glossary. And there is a good index, as well. I think it is a handsome and very useful text for teaching and learning general chemistry. A general reader could benefit from studying from it because it is clear and engaging enough that one can work through what is being taught.
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