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Chemistry3 Introducing Inorganic Organic: And Physical Chemistry

Traditionally, chemistry is taught in silos. You have your organic lectures, your physical chemistry labs, and your inorganic seminars, often using three different massive textbooks. Chemistry³ breaks this mold by acknowledging that the most exciting developments in modern science happen at the intersections of these branches.

Where many textbooks fail is in organic chemistry, often degenerating into a list of reactions to memorize. Chemistry3 takes the opposite approach. The organic section (Chapters 14–23) is built on . Traditionally, chemistry is taught in silos

Reaction mechanisms, stereochemistry, isomerism, and the chemistry of functional groups like alkenes, aromatics, and carbonyls. Features for Active Learning Where many textbooks fail is in organic chemistry,

Chemistry³: The Bridge Between the Three Pillars of Chemical Science your physical chemistry labs

Organic chemistry is the study of organic compounds, which are typically derived from living organisms and contain carbon. The chapter on organic chemistry covers topics such as: