book reviews el.aliantions; experimental techniques for pmbing the underlying chemistry. This introduction furnishes a conceptual framework on which to hang the snccecding chapters, gives the hook unity, and helps place the subject matter in context as a branch of physical organic chemistry. One gets the impression that the authors have considwed carefully the comments and criticisms of reviewers of the earlier book. The result is not perfect, but one does not find in it a, great deal to criticize. A number of statement,s have been para-
"The relevant literatrlre is spread aver so many different jonrnals." Surely they deserve a t least 8. mild chiding on this scare. I know of no group that has published in as many and as widely scattered journals as the Stanford group, even if one makes sllowances for collaboration with its alumni and others located in laboratories all over the world.
phrased from the literature in such a way as to convey an incorreot or misleading impressirx-passibly a. result of the pressure of the authors' self-imposed early deadline. The language idiosyncrasy that struck memost forcibly is the use of numerous synonyms to avoid using the same word repeatedly, e. g., "loss," "expulsion," "elimination," or "abstraction" of a neubral particle. Repeated use of sword that says exnctly what is iniended is not necessarily bad and, in fact, the use of many different wards to convey the same sense can he quite distracting. I n the preface, in defining the need for such n book, the ant,hors comment that
SEYMOUR EYERSO SON American Oil Cornpang $500 New York Avenue Whiling, Indiana 46394
Chelate* in Analytical Chemistry. Volume 1
Edit,ed by H. A . Flaschka, Georgia.Instit,nte of Technology, and A . J. Barnard, J7.,J. T. Baker Chemical Co. Marcel lhkker, Inc., New York, May, 1967. xii 418 pp. Figs. and tables. 16 X 23.5 cm. %18.75.
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Journol of Chemicol Education
The point of view of this new series, as expressed b y the editors in the Intraduction, is that ehelatiou is a "prominent chemical principle" which can serve "to unify a large area of analyt,ical chemistry." The editors stato flirther: "No grand scheme has been devised. Instead, an &tempt will nsoally be made to treat dissimilar topics within n single voh~me.. . . Same overlap of information from one article to another may occur, (but) it is hoped that as the number of valnmes in this series increases, a comprehensive treatment of chelating agents and chelates in analytical chemist,ry will he approached -at least asympt,otically." Volume I does present a diverse collection of topics, each treated with competence. Aft,er a. hrief history of analytical methods based on complex formation (including complexes wit,h monodent,at,e ligands, not generally treat,ed in this series), by F. SaabadvAry and M. T. Beck, there follow seven monographs ranging in length from 26 to 01 pages, with an average of one page of references per 10 pages of t,ext. The volume has a deliberate international flavor-of the eight sections, the authors of four are irom Csechodovakia, with Anstrin, Germany, I-Tungsry, and t,he USA each represented by one section. The v d ~ ~ mhas e ovwall ant,hor and subject indexes, and c~~mnletive indexes are planned. T'ery few errors were ionnd. Fonr specialized topics are t,xeated with relative completeness: Xylenol Orange m ~ d Methylthymol Blne, by B. BndE8inskjr, adds a new dimension to the use of these reagents as metallochromic indicat,om in ehelometric titrations: reactions with fifty different, met,al ions are t,t.eat,ed, with an amazing correlation between calc~daled and ohserved optimum pH values for complex format,ion. Chelating Ian-Exchange Resins, by E. Blasins and B. Brosio, deals with the prohlem of synt,hesiaing varioils types of chelate resins, with a detailed discnssion of the synthesis and properties of t,hree such (Continued on page A442)
book reviews resins; only brief ment,iorr is made of the latent annlyt,ienl potentialitiesof thesemateriilla for the chromatographic separation of similar ions and for the concentration of t , r m amounts of moltivalent cations from alkali salts. Thermal 1)issociatiun of C h e l a t i q Agents and Chelates of Analytical 11)t,erwt, by Weiley W. Wondlandt., covol.s t,he TGA and IITA behavior of many chelates (esp~cislly8-qninolinolates and p-diketonates), with available information on the mechanism of dissociat,ion. Unfort,,mat,ely, there was no mention of the relat,ionship hetween thermal stability and the g w chromatographic behavior of metal chelat,es. Chelates and Chelat,ing Agents in the Analytical Chemist,ry of hlolyhdenum and Tunesten., hv ., Richard Piisehel and Erik Lassner, surveys exha,~stivelythe chelatebased spect~.ophotometrie,extraction, and precipit,at,ianmethods for Ma(T'I), MOW), and W (VI). I t isnated thattheformation of chelates with such oxy-ion elements often involves t,he release of OH- whereas the relesse of IT+ &en accompanies the formation of transition-metal ehelates. Physical methods of analysis form the hwis of three chapters of relatively broad scope: Cond~ctomelric and High-Freqnency Impedimetrie Titrations Involvine Chelate.; and Chdating Agents, by F .
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A442 / lournol of Chemicol Educofion
Fluorescence Theory, Instrumentation, view, snggest,ing s. m~mherof interesting and Practice nndergraduat,e laboratory experiments. Chelates in Inorganic Polarographic AndEdited b y George G. Guilbaull, Lauiaiane ysis, by M. Kopaniex, J . I7oleLnl, and J. State University, New Orleans. MarZtka, isin two part,^: theseetion on Funcel Dekker, Inc., New York, Octoher damentals is a concise summary of the ef1967. xxviii 607 pp. Figs. and tsfeet of chelates on polarographic waves, inhles. 16 X 23.5 cm. $15.75. cluding kinetic efiects, competitive reactions, and adsorption phenomena; n secEach of the fourteen chaptee that, eomt,im on Applicat,ions inclndes data and recprise this book is derived from a paper ommended detailed procedures for some which was presented in s nymposium on thirty-five metals in typical sample matefluorescence (or more properly on luminesrials, the chelating media being principally cence) a t t,he 153rd meeting of the ACS in oxalat,e, citrate, tartrate, et,hylenediamine April, 1967. The symposi~~m and book tart,rate, ethylenediamine, triethsnolthns follow by 2 ' / , years a similar symamine, EI>TA, and 1)CYTA; most of the posium and its volume, "Fluorescence procedures exemplify the nse of ehelates and Phosphorescence Analysis," edited merely to shift a polarographic wave and by D. M. Hercules. Many of the chaplers thus inwease the specificity of a method. in "Floorescenee" am very different from The natnre of TiL I indicates that the those in the earlier work while a few deal sevies, althoilgh expensive, will he a ~ l s e f ~ l l with ~ i m i l a rtopics. The reviewer would reference wo1.k for most chemical libraries. question the choice of title since it implies ITowever, the editors may find themselves the contents are far mare general in scope i u a dilemma if some articles featlire t,he than is t,he ease as will he seen below. chelat,ing agent (with various element,^) This book is dedicated to Dr. Jean J. T. and others featttre t,he elements (with vnrDohais who was killed in a plane accident imls chelating agents): t,he end resdt, in ,\larch, 1967. The dedication by J. H. co\lld he a dnplication of the elementFnt,rell, L. Spialter, and F. Wilkinson reagent, matrix. Perhaps chelation as a snmmarises the life of Dr. Jhhois, the mau unifying principle can host he demo!>- w d his cant~ribntions. Dr. Wilkinson folsrmted hy monographs about chelating lows in t,hc fimt chapter with an excellent agents and aheir general prnpet.ties, with review of Modern Techniqoes of Energy cross-references in tho index tn the variolw Transfer, many of which were developed chelate3 of pnrtiatdnr elements. and applied successfully by Dr. Dubois. Among the chapt,ers dealing widh tradit,ional concerns related to fluorescence, Strnct,nral and Environmental Factors in (Conl