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The major purpose of this book is to direct chemists to some of the recent work of physicists, and in particular to a lengthy exposition of magnetic ordering phenomena. Chemists have long been interested in magnetic interactions in clusters, but many have shied away from long-range ordering phenomena.
Hot-atom chemistry is a unique field of chemistry dealing with highly excited chemical species resulting from nuclear reactions or radioactive decay processes.
Molecular stereochemistry is a fundamental aspect of all areas of chemistry. The present book evolved naturally from a series of articles written by Professor Kepert for Progre88 in Inorganic Ohemi8try, elucida ting aspects of the stereochemistry of inorganic compounds of co ordination numbers 4-12.
Since then, the subject of the electro chemistry of solids has developed further and a large number of new solid electrolytes have been discovered.
This book introduces the concept of crystallographic non-rigidity and asymmetry of the transition elements as centralatoms organometallic compounds.
Although the book forms part of a series in inorganic chemistry, the field of polyoxometalates deserves wider attention, for example, from organic chemists, especially those concerned with homogeneous and heterogeneous catalysis, and from biochemists, solid state- and materials scientists.
concentrates on teaching techniques using as much theory as needed. application of the techniques to many problems of materials characterization.
We were willing to excise from the problem the electronic aspects - the electronic wavefunctions' and their transition integrals -by treating them as parameters to be obtained from the experimental data.
A ligand in general can adopt various coordination modes depending on its chemical environment, thus functioning as a probe. In this book it is shown that even the simplest mono- and diatomic ligands such as H, CO, and N2 exhibit a variety of coordination modes, which are related to their reactions.
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