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The availability of a reprint of this book is to be
welcomed because it deals with many aspects of the subject in a
clear, straightforward manner and serves as a very good
introduction to reaction kinetics for undergraduates in chemistry,
biochemistry, and chemical engineering. The treatment is concise
and there is a very wide coverage, including chapters on
homogeneous and heterogeneous catalysis, on chain reactions,
on relaxation and other advanced techniques, on
photochemistry and radiation chemistry, and on reaction dynamics, as
well as the usual chapters expected in undergraduate
textbooks on chemical kinetics. The author strikes an excellent
balance between experiment and theory. Unlike authors of
many other relatively short undergraduate texts on this subject,
this author does not restrict his examples to a single phase,
but discusses examples from reactions in the gas phase, in
solution, and on the surface of solid catalysts.
The author is to be congratulated on managing such a
wide coverage and yet dealing with topics in sufficient depth
to allow understanding by readers who are meeting the subject
for the first time. The essential features of experimental
methods for determining rate constants and of quantitative
theories of chemical kinetics are helpfully explained, as are almost
all important aspects of reaction kinetics, including
unimolecular reactions in the gas phase and bimolecular reactions
in solution. Each chapter ends with a suggested reading list
of books and review articles, which students can easily use as
a reference source to obtain further information on
various topics of interest. There is also a set of problems at the
end of each chapter, the answers to which are given at the end
of the book.
An understanding of reaction kinetics is central to
chemical knowledge, and undergraduate as well as some
postgraduate students will find this book a valuable starting point for
studies concerning chemical kinetics.
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