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Cambridge physical chemistry

Ladd, M.F.C. (1998J Introduction to Physical Chemistry, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. Lawrence, C. et al. (1996J Foundations of Physical Chemistry, Oxford University Press, Oxford. Mortimer, R.G. (2000) Physical Chemistry, Academic Press, London. [Pg.553]

Denbigh, K., The Principles of Chemical Equilibrium, Cambridge University Press (1971) Avery, H. E. and Shaw, D. J., Basic Physical Chemistry Calculations, Butterworths (1971) Gross, J. M. and Wiseall, B., Principles of Physical Chemistry, Macdonald and Evans (1972) Kubaschewski, O., Evans, E. LI. and Alcock, C. B., Metallurgical Thermochemistry, 4th edition, Pergamon Press (1967)... [Pg.1255]

Department of Physical Chemistry, University of Cambridge, Lensfield Road, Cambridge CB2 lEP, England... [Pg.472]

In Penn s School of Arts and Sciences, Professor Fitts also served as Acting Dean for one year and as Associate Dean and Director of the Graduate Division for fifteen years. His sabbatical leaves were spent in Britain as a NATO Senior Science Fellow at Imperial College, London, as an Academic Visitor in Physical Chemistry, University of Oxford, and as a Visiting Fellow at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. [Pg.354]

Years of Physical Chemistry, a Celebration of the Faraday Society, Royal Society of Chemistry, Cambridge, 2003. [Pg.11]

RONALD W. MISSEN is Professor Emeritus (Chemical Engineering) at the University of Toronto. He received his B.Sc, and M.Sc. in chemical engineering from Queen s University, Kingston, Ontario, and his Ph.D. in physical chemistry from the University of Cambridge, England. He is the co-author of CHEMICAL REACTION EQUILIBRIUM ANALYSIS, and has authored or co-authored about f 50 research articles. He is a fellow of the Chemical Institute of Canada and the... [Pg.674]

Nucleation is a difficult topic. The physical chemistry of small particles attracting and aggregating is described in Chapters 9-11 of D. H. Everett s authoritative text, Basic Principles of Colloid Science, Royal Society of Chemistry, Cambridge, 1988. [Pg.539]

A vast library waits to be read on ozone depletion. The best book by far is Topic study 1 the threat to stratospheric ozone in the Physical Chemistry Principles of Chemical Change series, published in the UK by the Open University, Milton Keynes, 1996. From the UK s Royal Society of Chemistry come Climate Change, Royal Society of Chemistry, Cambridge, 2001, Green Chemistry, M. Lancaster, Royal Society... [Pg.554]

On the prizes and physical chemistry, see Elisabeth Crawford, "Arrhenius, the Atomic Hypothesis, and the 1908 Nobel Prizes," 503522 and The Beginnings of the Nobel Institution. The Science Prizes, 19011915 (Cambridge Cambridge University Press, 1984). [Pg.126]

Perrin s theory was flawed both in his failure to clearly express the radiation hypothesis in quantum terms and in his concrete examples of monomolecular reactions. Thomas Martin Lowry, recently appointed to a new chair of physical chemistry at Cambridge University, argued that Perrin s choices of chemical examples were unfortunate. [Pg.145]

Lowry, the holder of the new chair in physical chemistry at Cambridge University, spoke in Paris in March 1924 on aspects of the theory of valence, including the electronic theory of valence, and in December 1925 on optical methods of verifying structural chemistry and his own hypothesis of semipolar double bonds in organic compounds. The occasions were meetings of the Societe de Chimique de France and the Societe de Chimie Physique. 62... [Pg.172]

Armstrong s pupils included Ida Smedley (later Maclean), William J. Pope, Lapworth, Lowry, and F. P. Worley (later professor of chemistry at Auckland University in New Zealand). Smedley and Lapworth each were to teach at Manchester, where one of Lapworth s students was Robinson, the later 1947 Nobel Prize winner. Lowry became the first professor of physical chemistry at Cambridge University (1920), where Pope was Jacksonian Professor of Chemistry after teaching at the Manchester Municipal School of Technology in the early 1900s. [Pg.185]

Thomas Martin Lowry, the first professor of physical chemistry at the University of Cambridge. [Pg.355]

Moelwyn-Hughes, E. A., Physical Chemistry. Cambridge Univ. Press, London, 1940. [Pg.250]

HUMPHKEY OWEN JONES LECTURER IN PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CAMBRIDGE UNIVBR8ITY... [Pg.339]

Christopher Hardacre read natural sciences at the University of Cambridge, where he also obtained his PhD in 1994. He was appointed to a lectureship in physical chemistry at the Queen s University of Belfast in 1995 and in 2003, he became a professor of physical chemistry. He is currently director of research in CenTACat, and his current interests include the understanding of gas and liquid phase catalytic processes for emission control, clean energy production, and fine chemical synthesis as well as the study and use of ionic liquids. [Pg.404]

By D. Husain and R. J. Donovan, Department of Physical Chemistry, Cambridge University, and Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge. 1... [Pg.372]

Nehru Visiting Professor at the University of Cambridge. His thanks are due to Professor J. M. Thomas, FRS, and other colleagues of the Department of Physical Chemistry and to the members of King s College, Cambridge, for their kindness and hospitality. [Pg.564]

SYNGE, RICHARD L. M. (1914-1994). An Irish mathematician and physicist who won the Nobel prize for chemistry in 1952 along with Archer J. P. Martin for their invention of partition chromatography. His research was on llie application of mediods of physical chemistry to isolate and analyze proteins, with special attention to antibiotic peptides and higher plants. He received his doctorate from Cambridge. [Pg.1591]

Experimental Physical Chemistry , Cambridge-UnivPress, London (1941) 6)H.S.Taylor,... [Pg.220]


See other pages where Cambridge physical chemistry is mentioned: [Pg.29]    [Pg.32]    [Pg.42]    [Pg.43]    [Pg.44]    [Pg.178]    [Pg.250]    [Pg.154]    [Pg.133]    [Pg.98]    [Pg.105]    [Pg.107]    [Pg.20]    [Pg.216]    [Pg.31]    [Pg.193]    [Pg.208]    [Pg.256]    [Pg.258]    [Pg.288]    [Pg.34]    [Pg.154]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.127 , Pg.167 , Pg.175 ]




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