A cornerstone undergraduate text in analytical chemistry, this work offers a detailed yet accessible introduction to both classical and modern instrumental methods. Grounded in a framework of real-world applications—from industry and medicine to environmental analysis—it emphasizes problem-solving, quantitative rigor, and the scientific reasoning behind analytical decision Key features i…
Analytical instrumentation underpins research across fields—molecular biology, medicine, geology, food science, materials science, forensics, and more. This text equips undergraduate students and non‑chemist practitioners with a clear understanding of major instrumental techniques by starting from core principles and advancing to practical application Each chapter methodically covers: Fu…
A graduate-level text introducing inorganic chemical principles as applied to biological systems. Covers solution thermodynamics/kinetics, spectroscopy, transport/storage of metal ions, metalloproteins (oxygen carriers, redox enzymes), alkali/alkaline earth metals, metal regulation, toxicity, therapeutic metals, and problem-solving examples. Each chapter includes problems and review questions
Numerical Methods and Analysis (1992, 1st Edition) by James L. Buchanan and Peter R. Turner presents a practical and well-balanced introduction to numerical analysis. Covering key topics such as root-finding, interpolation, numerical integration, linear systems, and differential equations, the book emphasizes algorithm development and error analysis. Designed for students in mathematics, engine…
This textbook is designed for liberal arts students, meaning it likely emphasizes conceptual understanding over mathematical rigor. It introduces fundamental principles of chemistry in a broad, accessible way, possibly incorporating historical, societal, and practical applications of chemistry.