Physical Chemistry and Its Biological ApplicationsPhysical Chemistry and Its Biological Applications ... |
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Page 148
... chemical potential and the molar free energy are identical , and the chemical potential can be calculated from the con- centration by rewriting Equation ( 4-31 ) as = μι μ¦ + RT ln c ; ( 4-71 ) For a real solution , the concentration c ...
... chemical potential and the molar free energy are identical , and the chemical potential can be calculated from the con- centration by rewriting Equation ( 4-31 ) as = μι μ¦ + RT ln c ; ( 4-71 ) For a real solution , the concentration c ...
Page 423
... Chemical adsorption , in contrast , is quite specific to the particular combination of gas and solid , just as the possibility of a chemical reaction is specific to the nature of the reactants . The rate at which physical adsorption ...
... Chemical adsorption , in contrast , is quite specific to the particular combination of gas and solid , just as the possibility of a chemical reaction is specific to the nature of the reactants . The rate at which physical adsorption ...
Page 509
... chemical shift difference from neighboring peaks to the coupling constant is very small . Selection rules valid under the condition of a large ratio of chemical shift differ- ence to J no longer apply , and therefore the number of ...
... chemical shift difference from neighboring peaks to the coupling constant is very small . Selection rules valid under the condition of a large ratio of chemical shift differ- ence to J no longer apply , and therefore the number of ...
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absorption acid adsorbed adsorption amino amount behavior benzene Calculate carbon carboxyl cell chain charge Chem chemical chemical shift chloride cm³ coefficient complex components concentration containing corresponding curve described diagram dipole dissociation distance effect electric electrolyte electron energy change enthalpy entropy enzyme equal equation equilibrium constant example force free energy frequency function H₂O heat hydrogen atom hydrogen bonds increase interaction ionic ionization k₁ k₂ kcal kcal/mol kinetic magnetic field magnitude material measured membrane mixture molar mole fraction molecular weight molecules nuclei occurs orbital osmotic pressure oxidation oxygen particles polar potential protein proton quantum number radiation rate constant ratio reactant reaction represented resonance rotation sample shown in Figure sodium solid solubility solvent species spectrum spin structure substance sucrose surface tension temperature tion titration torr transition triplet tube vapor pressure velocity vibrational viscosity volume wavelength zero