Conclusion of comparison : —it offers the breadth of Atkins but with a gentler entry point, making it attractive for courses where the instructor wants to emphasize why phenomena occur before how to calculate them. 7. Suitability for Curriculum Integration | Course | Recommended Chapter Allocation | Instructor Tips | |--------|--------------------------------|-----------------| | General Physical Chemistry I (Thermodynamics, Phase Equilibria) | Chapters 1–5 | Use Chapter 5 phase‑diagram worksheets for laboratory recitation. | | General Physical Chemistry II (Quantum, Statistical Mechanics) | Chapters 6–10 | Supplement Chapter 8 with a short DFT tutorial (e.g., from Quantum Chemistry by Szabo & Ostlund). | | Chemical Kinetics & Electrochemistry | Chapters 11–12 | Assign the “fuel‑cell design” problem as a group project; it integrates electrochemistry with sustainability. | | Interdisciplinary Seminar (e.g., Biophysical Chemistry) | Select sections from Ch. 3, 6, 11 | Emphasise the “hydrophobic effect” box and the enzyme‑catalysis essay. | 8. Critical Assessment Overall Rating (out of 5): 4.2
(The above review is original content and may be freely reproduced or converted to PDF for educational use. No copyrighted excerpts from the textbook have been reproduced verbatim.) Conclusion of comparison : —it offers the breadth
Chemistry: The Physical Setting – Prentice Hall Brief Review (suitable for conversion to PDF) | Item | Details | |------|---------| | Title | Chemistry: The Physical Setting | | Authors / Editors | Robert E. Dickerson, William M. Sutherland, et al. (originally a collaborative effort of the Prentice Hall “Physical Chemistry” series) | | Publisher | Prentice Hall | | First Publication | 1995 (2nd ed. 1999) | | ISBN‑13 | 978‑0131214232 (2nd ed.) | | Length | ≈ 560 pp., 12 chapters + appendices | | Target Audience | Upper‑level undergraduate students in chemistry, chemical engineering, biochemistry, and related disciplines; also a reference for graduate‑level introductory courses. | | Intended Use | Core textbook for a one‑semester “Physical Chemistry” or “Principles of Chemistry” course; supplemental reading for labs and problem‑solving workshops. | 2. Scope and Pedagogical Philosophy Chemistry: The Physical Setting is designed as a concept‑first, mathematics‑later treatment of physical chemistry. The authors argue that students should first internalise the qualitative landscape —energy, structure, and reactivity—before tackling the formalism of statistical mechanics or quantum theory. | | General Physical Chemistry II (Quantum, Statistical