Book Title: Introductory Chemistry Ball

Authors: Anna Spaulding; David W. Ball; and Jessie A. Key

Cover image for Introductory Chemistry Ball

Book Description: The goal of this textbook is not to make you an expert. True expertise in any field is a years-long endeavor. Here I will survey some of the basic topics of chemistry. This survey should give you enough knowledge to appreciate the impact of chemistry in everyday life and, if necessary, prepare you for additional instruction in chemistry.

License:
Creative Commons Attribution NonCommercial ShareAlike

Contents

Book Information

Book Description

The goal of this textbook is not to make you an expert. True expertise in any field is a years-long endeavor. Here I will survey some of the basic topics of chemistry. This survey should give you enough knowledge to appreciate the impact of chemistry in everyday life and, if necessary, prepare you for additional instruction in chemistry. Throughout each chapter, I present two features that reinforce the theme of the textbook—that chemistry is all around you. The first is a feature titled, appropriately, “Chemistry Is Everywhere.” Chemistry Is Everywhere” focuses on the personal hygiene products that you may use every morning: toothpaste, soap, and shampoo, among others. These products are chemicals, aren’t they? Ever wonder about the chemical reactions that they undergo to give you clean and healthy teeth or shiny hair? I will explore some of these chemical reactions in future chapters. But this feature makes it clear that chemistry is, indeed, everywhere. The other feature focuses on chemistry that you likely indulge in every day: eating and drinking. In the “Food and Drink App,” I discuss how the chemistry of the chapter applies to things that you eat and drink every day. Carbonated beverages depend on the behavior of gases, foods contain acids and bases, and we actually eat certain rocks. (Can you guess which rocks without looking ahead?) Cooking, eating, drinking, and metabolism—we are involved with all these chemical processes all the time. These two features allow us to see the things we interact with every day in a new light—as chemistry.

Book Source

This book is a cloned version of Introductory Chemistry - 1st Canadian Edition by David W. Ball and Jessie A. Key, published using Pressbooks by BCcampus under a CC BY-NC-SA (Attribution NonCommercial ShareAlike) license. It may differ from the original.

Authors

Anna Spaulding; David W. Ball; and Jessie A. Key

License

Icon for the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License

Introductory Chemistry Ball Copyright © 2014 by Jessie A. Key is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

Subject

Chemistry

Metadata

Title
Introductory Chemistry Ball
Authors
Anna Spaulding; David W. Ball; and Jessie A. Key
License

Icon for the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License

Introductory Chemistry Ball Copyright © 2014 by Jessie A. Key is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

Unless otherwise noted, Introductory Chemistry is © 2011 David W. Ball. The textbook content was produced by David W. Ball and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported Licence, except for the following changes and additions, which are © 2014 Jessie A. Key, and are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence.

Chapter 6, Gases, now includes the following sections:

  • Kinetic Molecular Theory
  • Molecular Effusion and Diffusion
  • Real Gases

Chapter 9, Chemical Bonds, now includes the following content:

  • Additional periodic trends such as shielding and Z-effective
  • Atomic orbital energy diagrams
  • Molecular Orbitals

Chapter 10, Solids and Liquids, now includes the following content:

  • Phase diagrams and explanations

Chapter 16, Organic Chemistry, now includes the following content;

  • Current IUPAC nomenclature

Chapter 17, Kinetics, now includes the following sections:

  • Factors that affect the rate of reactions
  • Reaction rates
  • Rate laws
  • Temperature and Rate
  • Reaction Mechanisms
  • Catalysts

New material: Chapter 18, Chemical Thermodynamics, which includes the following sections:

  • Spontaneity
  • Entropy and the second law of thermodynamics
  • Molecular Entropy and the third law of thermodynamics
  • Entropy Changes in Chemical Reactions
  • Gibbs Free Energy
  • Free Energy and Temperature
  • Free Energy and the Equilibrium Constant

Glossary and Appendices added.

The CC licence permits you to retain, reuse, copy, redistribute, and revise this book—in whole or in part—for free providing the author is attributed as follows:

If you redistribute all or part of this book, you must include the following on the copyright notice page:

Download for free from the B.C. Open Textbook Collection.

Sample APA-style citation:

This textbook can be referenced. In APA citation style, it would appear as follows:

Ball, D. and J. Key. (2014). Introductory Chemistry – 1st Canadian Edition. Victoria, B.C.: BCcampus. Retrieved from https://opentextbc.ca/introductorychemistry/.

Cover image attribution:

Ebook ISBN: 978-1-77420-003-2

Print ISBN: 978-1-77420-002-5

Visit BCcampus Open Education to learn about open education in British Columbia.

Primary Subject
Chemistry
Additional Subject(s)
Publisher
BCcampus
Publication Date
September 16, 2014