Student Solutions Manual to Accompany Modern Physical Organic Chemistry / Edition 1

Student Solutions Manual to Accompany Modern Physical Organic Chemistry / Edition 1

ISBN-10:
189138936X
ISBN-13:
9781891389368
Pub. Date:
08/15/2005
Publisher:
University Science Books
ISBN-10:
189138936X
ISBN-13:
9781891389368
Pub. Date:
08/15/2005
Publisher:
University Science Books
Student Solutions Manual to Accompany Modern Physical Organic Chemistry / Edition 1

Student Solutions Manual to Accompany Modern Physical Organic Chemistry / Edition 1

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Overview

This Student Solutions Manual, which provides complete solutions to all of the nearly 600 exercises in the accompanying textbook, will encourage students to work the exercises, enhancing their mastery of physical organic chemistry. When used properly by students to compare their solutions with the detailed solutions provided in the manual, it will serve as an excellent tool for sharpening skills and encouraging a deeper understanding of the concepts that are covered. Like the accompanying text by Anslyn and Dougherty, this manual also includes Going Deeper highlights on selected topics, where students can explore exceptions to the rule, discover surprising connections between topics, and gain insights into practical aspects of the material. Problem-solving strategies will be enhanced by students’ coordinated use of the textbook and this manual.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781891389368
Publisher: University Science Books
Publication date: 08/15/2005
Edition description: 2006
Pages: 356
Product dimensions: 8.50(w) x 11.00(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

Eric V. Anslyn received his PhD in Chemistry from the California Institute of Technology under the direction of Robert Grubbs. After completing post-doctoral work with Ronald Breslow at Columbia University, he joined the faculty at the University of Texas at Austin, where he became a Full Professor in 1999. He currently holds four patents and is the recipient of numerous awards and honors, including the Presidential Young Investigator, the Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellow, the Searle Scholar, the Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar Award, and the Jean Holloway Award for Excellence in Teaching. He is also the Associate Editor for the Journal of the American Chemical Society and serves on the editorial boards of Supramolecular Chemistry and the Journal of Supramolecular Chemistry. His primary research is in physical organic chemistry and bioorganic chemistry, with specific interests in catalysts for phosphoryl and glycosyl transfers, receptors for carbohydrates and enolates, single and multi-analyte sensors – the development of an electronic tongue, and synthesis of polymeric molecules that exhibit unique abiotic secondary structure.


Dennis A. Dougherty received a PhD from Princeton with Kurt Mislow, followed by a year of postdoctoral study with Jerome Berson at Yale. In 1979 he joined the faculty at the California Institute of Technology, where he is now George Grant Hoag Professor of Chemistry. Dougherty's extensive research interests have taken him to many fronts, but he is perhaps best known for development of the cation-π interaction, a novel but potent noncovalent binding interaction. More recently, he has addressed molecular neurobiology, developing the in vivo nonsense suppression method for unnatural amino acid incorporation into proteins expressed in living cells. This powerful new tool enables “physical organic chemistry on the brain” - chemical-scale studies of the molecules of memory, thought, and sensory perception and the targets of treatments for Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, schizophrenia, learning and attention deficits, and drug addiction. His group is now working on extensive experimental and computational studies of the bacterial mechanosensitive channels MscL and MscS, building off the crystal structures of these channels recently reported by the Rees group at Caltech.



Dennis A. Dougherty received a PhD from Princeton with Kurt Mislow, followed by a year of postdoctoral study with Jerome Berson at Yale. In 1979 he joined the faculty at the California Institute of Technology, where he is now George Grant Hoag Professor of Chemistry. Dougherty's extensive research interests have taken him to many fronts, but he is perhaps best known for development of the cation-π interaction, a novel but potent noncovalent binding interaction. More recently, he has addressed molecular neurobiology, developing the in vivo nonsense suppression method for unnatural amino acid incorporation into proteins expressed in living cells. This powerful new tool enables “physical organic chemistry on the brain” - chemical-scale studies of the molecules of memory, thought, and sensory perception and the targets of treatments for Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, schizophrenia, learning and attention deficits, and drug addiction. His group is now working on extensive experimental and computational studies of the bacterial mechanosensitive channels MscL and MscS, building off the crystal structures of these channels recently reported by the Rees group at Caltech.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1: Introduction to Structure and Models of Bonding, SolutionsChapter 2: Strain and Stability, SolutionsChapter 3: The Thermodynamics of Solutions and Noncovalent Binding Forces, SolutionsChapter 4: Molecular Recognition and Supramolecular Chemistry, SolutionsChapter 5: Acid-Base Chemistry, SolutionsChapter 6: Stereochemistry, SolutionsChapter 7: Energy Surfaces and Kinetic Analyses, SolutionsChapter 8: Experiments Related to Thermodynamics and Kinetics, SolutionsChapter 9: Catalysis, SolutionsChapter 10: Organic Reaction Mechanisms Part 1: Reactions Involving Additions and/or Eliminations, SolutionsChapter 11: Organic Reaction Mechanisms Part II: Substitutions at Aliphatic Centers and Thermal Isomerizations/Rearrangements, SolutionsChapter 12: Organotransition Metal Reaction Mechanisms and Catalysis, SolutionsChapter 13. Organic Materials Chemistry, SolutionsChapter 14. Advanced Concepts in Electronic Structure Theory, SolutionsChapter 15: Thermal Pericyclic Reactions, SolutionsChapter 16: Photochemistry, SolutionsChapter 17: Electronic Organic Materials, SolutionsAppendix
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