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Arrhenius, Svant

Arrhenius, Svante, 86,353 Arsenic, 573-574 Asparagine, 622t Aspartic acid, 622t Aspirin. See Acetylsalicylic acid Astaxanthin, 157 Asymmetric synthesis, 601 Atherosclerosis, 604... [Pg.682]

Aromatic compounds, 344 Arrhenius, Svante, 198 Arsenic, ionization energy, 410 Asbestos, 310 Aspirin, 346 Astatine... [Pg.455]

Arrhenius, Svante. "On the Dissociation of Substances in Aqueous Solution (1887)." In The Foundations of the Theory of Dilute Solution. Edinburgh Alembic Club, 1929. [Pg.303]

Armstrong, 1401 Arrhenius equation, 1115, 1507 Arrhenius, Svante, 1473 Asaki, 1159, 1313... [Pg.30]

Arrhenius activation energy 483 Arrhenius equation 483 Arrhenius, Svante A. 9, 83... [Pg.907]

Although his research activity diminished after these two major discoveries, Hess remained influential in the development of chemistry in Russia. His textbook Fundamentals of Pure Chemistry saw seven editions and remained the standard Russian text in chemistry until 1861. He remained active in teaching and mentoring younger scientists, until declining health forced his retirement in 1848. He died on December 13, 1850, at the relatively young age of forty-eight, see also Arrhenius, Svante Berzelius, Jons Jakob Thermochemistry. [Pg.205]

Kelly A. Quin. Reproduced by permission p. 58 Arrhenius, Svante, photograph. Hulton-Deutsch Collection/Corbis. Reproduced by permission p. 63 Diet Pepsi in a glass, sitting next to a Pepsi can, two packets of Equal sweetener in front, photograph by Kelly A. Quin. [Pg.265]

Anfinsen, Christian Arrhenius, Svante Avery, Oswald Avogadro, Amedeo Baekeland, Leo Balmer, Johann Jakob Bardeen, John Becquerel, Antoine-Henri Berg, Paul... [Pg.308]

Limitations imposed by slip and inertia terms upon Stokes law for the motion of spheres through liquids. Phil. Mag., 22 (6th Ser.) 755-775. Arrhenius, Svante... [Pg.497]

Arrhenius, Svante August (1859-1927) Swedish Chemist, physicist Svante August Arrhenius was born in Vik (or Wijk), near Uppsala, Sweden, on February 19, 1859. He was the second son of Svante Gustav Arrhenius and Carolina Christina (nee Thunberg). [Pg.17]

Arrhenius, Svante. (1859-1927). A native of Sweden, he won the Nobel Prize in chemistry in 1903. He is best known for his fundamental investigations on electrolytic dissociation of compounds in water and other solvents, and for his basic equation stating the increase in the rate of a chemical reaction with rise in temperature ... [Pg.100]

Arrhenius, Svante (1859-1927). Fundamental research on rates of reaction versus temperature, expressed by the Arrhenius equation, and on electrolytic dissociation. Nobel Prize 1903. [Pg.1365]


See other pages where Arrhenius, Svant is mentioned: [Pg.711]    [Pg.362]    [Pg.365]    [Pg.34]    [Pg.34]    [Pg.17]    [Pg.18]    [Pg.67]   
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