The purpose of this treatise is stated in the preface to the first edition. The second edition has been enlarged by five new chapters (I, II, V, XIII, XXVI), by new sections in chapters XV and XXII…
It is the objective of this book to deseribe and explain, by diseussion of prineiples, the various methods by which adsorption may be utilized in organie chemistry as a tool for the separation of…
The apparatus for the study of organic compounds by physical methods and its use have been discussed in Volume I of this series. In many of these methods the experimental data are readily interpr…
The search for information about the changes which compounds undergo is of the very essence of chemistry, not only because of the end-products formed, but also in view of the intermediates and th…
Since the appearance of the first edition of Organic Solvents in 1935 many advances have been made in the field. The systematic determination and evaluation of physical properties has continued i…
The advantages of microchemical methods are the saving of time, labor, and materials. Much of the work on vitamins, hormones, and other natural products would not have been possible had more than…