Analytical Applications of Ion Exchangers (Inczedy, Janos)

manner and reflects the personal hias of the author. For instance, one fails to find significa~~t information on the hydrogen wave, one of the oldest ...
1 downloads 0 Views 1MB Size
BOOK REVIEWS coulometrio titratious, chronupotentiomd r y , differential and derivative voltsmmetry, and cyrlir and pulse techniques, hesides controlled-potential electrolysis and coulometry at. controlled potential which had been in the earlier edition. Although t,reatment of these techniques is in outline only, it appears tn he adequate t o indicate their usefulness and limitations. The book is written in an authoritative manner and reflects the personal hias of the author. For instance, one fails to find significa~~t information on the hydrogen wave, one of the oldest topic; in polarogmphy, or on the protein waves which have been the subject of many hundreds of papers. This is not offered as a criticism hilt as a comment, hecanse selertion of suhject matter becomes necessary in this ever-expanding field if one wants to stay r i t h i n a limited amount of space. Since it now requires the s c n ~ t i n yof 600 pages where formerly 200 sufficed to know ahoot polarography, one ia tempted to suggest that the book might he improved by a clear separation of the simple basic theory and practical suggestions from the mow refilled and complicated theoretical eonsiderations. OTTOH. ~ I B L L E R Stale University o j New Y o 4

Analytical Appliratlonr of Ion Exchangers

Jdms InczMy, Techniral Cniveraity, Budapest. Translated by .I. Pdll, Technical University. Trans. ed. by 1 William, College of Advanced Technology, Birmingham, England. Pergamon Press, Inc., Long Island Cit>-, New York, 1966. xi 443 pp. Figs. and tables. 14.5 X 22.5 em. 517.50.

+

This is a translation of a hook which first appeared in the Hongarian language in 1962. A German edition appeared in 1964, and now we have an English edition, somewhat revised and updated, references through the first part of 1962. The heart of the hook ic in t,he three chapters, Chapters 6 to 8, which describe the applications of ion exchange to quantitative and qualitative inorganic analpis and ta organic analysis. These occupy nearly half of the hook. .i strong featme is the inclusion of malty representative analytical procedures with wflirient experimental detail bhat thev cau heused in the temperature alloys to polyvinyl acetate, amino-acids, and the alkaloids of ipecacuana mot. 31any of the procednres come from Central and Eastern European journals that m e not readily accessible to American renders. The chapter an quantitative inorganic nnalysis has 526 references and inrludes n table of chram.zlographic separations 27 pages long. That on qualitative analysis includes a tnhulnr

(Conlinurrl on page -110.94) A1092

/

Journal o f Chemical Education

BOOK REVIEWS summary of the worg of Fujimoto and colleagues on microchemical tests done in single resin beads. Other chapters treat the preparation and testing of ion-exchanging materials and their behaviour in nonaqueoos solvents, principles of ion-exchange kinetim and

study complexes. The chapter entitled Methods for Laboratory Operation of Ion Exchangers has a short but very useful section on the theory of chromatographic columns based largely on the work of Glueeksuf. This section might well have been expanded; also the symbols and quant,ities might have been more earefully defined. There is a n annoying little typographical error in an equation for theoretical plate height on p. 101. Other sections, by contrast, are unnecessarily detailed and uncritical. Some of the testing methods, for example, me vague and iU-defined, and the reader will probably prefer t o devise his own. It is impossible for s. hook in this field t o he up-to-date, and much has happened since 1962. Nevertheless this is a valuable reference work for those who use inn exchange in chemical analysis.

HAROLD F. WALTON University o j Colorado, Boulder

A1094

/

Journal of Chemical Education

The Structure of Small Molecules

W . J . Oroille-Tkonm, University College of Wales, Aherystwyth, Great Britain. Vol. 1 of Principles of Modern Chemistly Series. American Elsevier Publishing Ca., Inc., New York, 1966. vii 189 pp. Figs. and tables. 14 X 22 cm. 89.50.

+

"The Structure of Small Molecules" is an introductory monograph dealing with what one might consider the minimum m o u n t of knowledge necessary for an appreciation of those factors which cause atoms to take up particuler configurations in forming chemical bonds. The subject matter is absolutely basic to an understanding of modern chemistry. Cuiloudy, the author (British) states that his aim is t o pavide a, short text for a graduate course, whereas most of the material is quite well suited to a junior or senior level course in American universitie; indeed some of i t may be found in recent monographs intended for freshman and sophomore courses. I n 180 pages the author describes most of the important empirical concepts of honding in diatomic and small symmetrical polyatomic molecules. The introdoction of the wave equation and its variational solution by the method of molecular orbitals is treated in the usual extremely qualitative fashion. I n this sense the book follows the established tradition of refusing the student the op-

portunity to make use of even the simplest ~ s p e e tof s his mathemetical t~aining. The measureable physical properties of chemical bonds such as bond lengths, bond angles, vibrational frequencies and force constants, band energies, dipole moments, and electronegativities are introduced and ilh~stratedwi1.h well-chosen examples. One of the important plus features is the author's well-organized and lucid style. A second highlight is the fairly extensive discussion of the contribution of lone pair atomic dipoles to the molecula dipole moment and bonding configuration in polyatomic molecules. The conceptual structure of the theory is treated almost exclusively within the framework of the molecular orbital theory. This is certainly the approach that is in vogue but i t is, in the reviewer's opinion, just as serious s. limitation as the exclusive use of valance bond theory in some of the more classical texts such as Syrkin and Dyatkina. This book can he recommended as supplementary reading far undergraduate courses which require a n introduction to structure and bonding. It cannot compete, however, with more comprehensive texts such as Pauling, Syrkin and Dyatkina, or Coulsan far a. graduate course in bonding theory. V. D. NEFF Kent Stole University Kent, Ohio (Continued on page .11096)