Chromium, volume I: Chemistry of chromium and its compounds (Udy

his habit of ignoring subjert-matter hound- rtries he ha8 ptmpected in the domain of chemistry. Kettering was ... his middle name is Franklin and that...
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ELEMENTARY PRACTICAL ORGANIC CHEMISTRY. PART I. SMALL SCALE PREPARATIONS

Arthur I. Vogel, Head of Chemistry Depa~hnent,Woolwich Polytechnic. Longmans, Green & Co., New York. 1957. xv 347 xiv pp. Many tables and figures. 1 5 X 22.5 cm. $4.50.

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THISnew book is the first of a series of three books intended for Use by students of organic ehemistn. and deal8 with smallscale laboratory preparations. Part 11, now in press, is concerned with the qualitative analysis and Part 111 u.hich is in preparation with the quantitative analysis of organic compounds. Chapter I of "Elementary Practical Organic Chemistrj-" is a good, thorough discussion of the theory of general technique including: the thoory of distillation, solutions of liquids in liquids, theory of melting and frwzing, and the theory of drying and extraction. Chapter I1 on experimental technique consiats of 110 pages of very helpful in~t,ruetionsand suggestions regarding the rleaning of glasswave, construction of heating and cooling lmths, mechanical agitation, rslihrat,ion of thermometers, experimental determinations of melting points and boiling points, fractionation, distillation under diminished pressure, purification by recrystallization, removal of coloring matter, drying of nolid organic compounds, drying of liquids or solution^ of o~gnniccompounds in organic solvents, the technique of extraction u-ith solvents including continuous extraction methods, and tho purification of organic d v o n t s . Chapter 111 gives detailed instructions for the preparat,ion of a wide variety of nliphntir compounds including: saturated xnd unsaturated hydracarhana, alkyl halides, aliphatic ethers, aldehydes, ketones, anhydrides, carboxylir acids and their esters, and amides, amines and related compounds, maleic and fumaric acids, and the produot~ of the malonic ester ~ynthesisand tho acetoacetic ester synt,hesis. Chapter IV deals with the preparation and reactions of the aromatic compounds; nitration, halogenation and sulfonatian of aromatic hydrocnrhons, preparation of amines and many of their derivatives, reduction products of nitrobenzene, resetions of diaeanium salts to form various substituted aromatic compounds, propertie8 and preparation of aldehydes, ketones, acids, and alcohols. Chapter V includes 21 miscellaneous experiments which should draw the attention of some of the better students. They include Skraup's reaction for quinoline, Uoebner-Miller reaction for quinaldine, the preparation 2,4pdichlaraphonoxyscotir acid, S-benzyl-~othiuronium chloVOLUME 34, NO. 10, OCTOBER, 1957

ride, D.D.T., the depolymerization of nylon, the use of an organolithium oompound, reduction with aluminium isomonoxide. reductions with lithiumd d u minium hydride, the dime ~ynthenis,and applications of some chromatographic adsorptions. The most interesting feature of the book is that tho author uses apparatus of such design that all of the experiments are performed on a small scale. He Rtates that "the student trained with their aid will be able to adapt himself easily and without effort to preparations on 8. macro scale." In section 11, 1, the author enumerates many advantages of small-scale apparatus for small-scale preparations. Electronic interpretations are given for many of the more important react,ions. The book is an excellent guide for anyone who might wish to carry out litboratory preparations on a small ~ c a l c . It is an excellent laboratory manual.

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OERRlT VAN BYL HOP.CoL~eor: HOLLAND, MICHI.*W

PROFESSIONAL AMATEUR. THE BIOGRAPHY OF CHARLES FRANKLIN KETTERING

the 37 years of his direction, came: ethyl gasoline, new finishes for quick car paint, ing, a more efficient Diesel engine, and a high compression engine for automobiles. His extracurricular activities have included: a share in the study of heat for medical therapy, production of a World War I pilotless plane, and a part in the planning and financing of an Institute for Cancer Research. His reluctant response to a call for help is ereditcd with "saving the Winters National Bankof Lhytan from collapse" in 1924. I t was hi8 initiative that put him into businens with a. hometown concern, in order "to elevate living conditions and general pranperity of the people of the town." Since his retirement in 1947 he has been almost ns active a8 before. Four interests cli~imhis sttention: the canoer research, photosynthesis, magnetism, and a better and cheaper light, airplane. Author Royd, a former research ass* eiate of Kettering, makes generous use of quoted excerpts from Kettering's writings and speeches. He is irankly laudatory and gives aeant attention ta any personal quirks shich may have been less than helpful to family or aasociztes. However, the book's narrative does, in course, bring the reader to a. sense of encounter with "Ross Ket" in person. R. CLIFFORD HENDRICXS

T.A. Boyd. E. P. Dutton & Co., lnc., New

457 21th AVEXCE

York. 1957. xii 242 pp. 14 X 21.5 cm. $4.50.

LONCVIEW.

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WHATis there ahout an electrical engineer, turned mechanical, that merits a chemist's attention? For one thing, Ket, tering was mare than "mechanical!' In his habit of ignoring subjert-matter houndrtries he ha8 ptmpected in the domain of chemistry. Kettering was, in a sense, the catalyst that helped Thomas Midgley change from mechanical engineer to chemist. Whether for chemical or athcr fields, his markedly unconventional ppatterns of handling research problems are sugge~tivefor all who cope with the frub trationfi of research. Some of his admirers have noted that his middle name is Franklin and that his total personality merits t,hr label, "A twentieth eentur,y Franklin." By an inventory of inventions, howwer, one finds % more accurate comparative in Thomas A. Edison. The book chronicles his life in renearch as a truly American success story. For five ypwp fallowing his graduation from college he worked for the National Cash Register Company. By 1009 his private research program oeeupied all his time. Ten years later he was persuaded to hitch his inventive genius t o the star of the new1.v o~tshlishedGeneral Motors Research L a b oratory. From that labor at or?^, during

W*BXIN.TON

CHROMIUM. VOLUME I: CHEMISTRY OF CHROMIUM AND ITS COMPOUNDS Edited by Momin I. Udy, Strategic-Udy Metallurgical and Chemical Processes, Ltd. Niagara Falls. Reinhold Publishing Corp., New York. 1956. xii 433 pp. 4 0 figs. 83 tables. 16 X 23.5 cm. $11.

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VOLUMEI of a two volume aeries on Chromium is the result of the combined effortsof sixteen authors in addition to the editor, who authored the historical introduction. These contributors represent academic, government, and industrial organizations, and even casual inspection reveals the care exercised in the distribution of the writing. The volume is divided into two major sections. The first section includes chapters on History of Chromium, Analytical Chemistry of Chromium, Relation of Chromium to Health, and Chromium in Soils, Plants, and Animals. The second section bear8 the heading "Physical and Chemical Properties of Chromium Compounds." The chapters in this section include The Physical and Chemical Properties of Comp o u n d ~of Chromium, Chromium Chemicals: Their Industrial Use, Chromium Chpmieals in the Text,& Industry, Chrom-

ium Chemicals in the Tanning Industry, Chromium Chemicals in Wood Preservation, Chromium Chemicals in Corrosion Prevention, The Manufacture and P r o p erties of Chromium Pigments, Chromium Chemicals in the Graphic Arts, Chromium Chemicals in the Oil and Gas Industries. This and its companion volume provide the chemist with extensive reviews on virtually all of the significant topics relating t o chromium chemistry, metallurgy, and technology. Some of the topics are treated with impressive thoroughness, although this cannot he said of all of the subjects. I t is probably a consequence of the joint authorship that the style, organization, and, t o some extent, the quality vary from chapter t o chapter. This is reflected particularly in the frequency of occurrence of minor errors of the kind easily eliminated in proof. In this eonneotion, i t is noted that the names of two of the cantrihntors are incorrectly spelled on page iii. The ohapter on Physical and Chemical Properties, which represents 32% of the pagination of the volume, oontains a fantastic accumulation of information, and should be invaluable as a reference, although its compactness detracts eonsiderably from the ease with which i t may be read. It appears that some of the information is based on relatively old sources, such ss the earlier reference books. For example, the nomenclature recommended for chromium complexes is not modern, while the seven pages devoted to coordination compounds cite only one reference to the original literature, relying almost entirely on two eleven-and twelve year-old texts. The bibliography for this chapter contains no citations later than 1952. A number of the other chapters are limited t o the literature prior to 1953, although this is not general. The chapters in the introductory section and those on industrial applications provide an effective orientation for the reader on the position of chromium in a. nature and societv. ~,. . . as well as offerine WPRI deal 01 I I W L I ~informil~iox~111 a few I:HPCI, m ~ n eIwk of l i & m among the ituthorti is indicnted 1," mpclition of dwussion in mare than one place. This volume will serve those concerned with either the chemistry of chromium or with one of the several aspects of chromium technology discussed. ~

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DARYLE H. BUSCH TREO A ~ O ST*TEUNIVERBITT cornmoas. Onlo

VAPOUR PHASE CHROMATOGRAPHY Proceedings of the Symposium sponsored by the Hydrocarbon Research Group of the Iastitute of Petroleum, London, May 30, 1956. D. H.Desty, Editor. Academic 436 Press, Inc., New York, 1957. xv pp. 244 figs. 16.5 X 25.5 cm. $12.

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THIShook is an important and valuable addition to the literature of gas-liquid chromatography for two reasons: the hook is composed of articles by active workers in the field, and of discussions of the ttrt,icles by the workers. I t contains a

brief section on recommended nomenclature which should help to stabilize this important tool of communication. This is followed by a brief address of welcome and then 36 articles with interspersed discuesion. The articles deal with general theory; theory of more specialized kinds, such as that of detectors; techniques of operation; apparatus; applications. These are full of valuable ideas and data, and will he of great assistance and inspiration to the gas chrvmatographer. The discussions are fully as important. In some ways, these set this book apart, because here one comes across the kinds of insightful comments that seldom survive the editorial pencil to appear in journal articles. For this reason, the discussions make particularly valuable reading. Considering that an apparatus for gas chromatography may cost in the neighborhood of 100 times the price of this book, the additional investment represented by this book is not excessive, and indeed is recommended as a good one. HAROLD G. CASSIDY Y * L ~U ~ , v e n s , ~ r NEWH*VSN. CONNECT~CUT

THE MiCROBIAL WORLD Roger Y. Stonier, Michael Doudoroff, Edward A. Adelberg, Department d Bacteriology, University of California. Prentice-Hall, Inc., Eglewood Cliffs, N. 1.. 1957. u i i 682 pp. Many figures. 16 X 23.5 cm. $6.

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WRITTENby three University of California bacteriologists, this 682-page text presents all the principles of bacteriology on a level suitable for the beginning student. It is divided into three parts: Part I, "The Properties of Microorgauisms," explains how microorganisms were discovered. how they are studied, and what they are. Part 11, "The Ecology of Microorganisms," describes their distribution in nature, their influence on the living and nonliving environment of the earth's surface, and their exploitation by man for his own ends. Part 111, "The Biological Background," provides the reader with a. brief survey or review of general biological facts and theories. OF CHEMICAL Readers of the JOURNAL EDUCATION who are interested in keeping abreast of recent developments in the fields of biology ttnd biochemistry will find Part 111 particuldy useful. It consists of Chapter A, The Composition, Strueture and Reproduction of Living Organisms; Chapter B, Genetics, Evolution and Classification; and Chapter C, Physiology, Biochemistry and Nutrition. The last chapter provides an excellent source of background material to enrich clessroom discussion of biochemical topics in the general chemistry course. The text has numerous chaxts and tables and is well illustrated with line drawings and original illustrations. LLOYD E. MALM

UNIVEBBITP 0 s UT*H SALTLASE CITY. UTAB

THE DEFECT SOLID STATE

T. 1. Gray, D. P. Detwiler, D. E. Rose, W. G. Lawrence, R. R. West, and T. J. Jennings, College of Ceramics, Alfred University. Intersoience Publishers. Inc., New York, 1957. vii 511 pp. 16 X 23.5 a.$11.

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TEE dustcover presents this hook as "a challenging coherent presentation of the relationship between the defect natures of solids and their physical and chemical properties"; the reviewer does not share this opinion. A coherent and thoughtful account of the rapidly developing field of d i d imperfections would he very welcome a t present, but this is not what the authors have produced. The book can be criticized on several grounds, both general and detailed. The presentation of much of the fundamental information about defects is quite inadequate; there are numerous misleading and even wrong statements; about one-quarter of the book has virtually nothing to do with defects in solids. The first eight chapters are concerned with topics suoh as semiconductivity, diffusion, sintering, corrosion, magnetic properties and catalysis, all of which are relevant t o the subject of solid imperfeetious. On the other hand, Chapter 9 is an account of phase equilibria suoh as one would expeot t o find in intermediate textbooks on physical chemistry, and its connection with the defect solid state is not apparent. Chapter 10, on ceramic mate~ials for high temperatures, also seems irrelevant. I n addition, one must deprecate the journalistic jargon used in this chapter. There is no place in s scientific book for such statements as: "Since Carnot developed his now famous principle governing heat engines the race has been a n . . ."; "This advance up the temperature scale. . ." Chapter 11, on intermetdic compounds, is so brief that i t does not fairly reflect the wide range of research heine done on these comoounds.

ances. These are not, however, comprehensive discussions; far example, the extensive contributions of C. Eyraud t o the development of both techniques are not mentioned. The book cannot he recommended to the uninitiated because of serious shortcomings in the early chapters. I t should surely he stated on page 1 that there are sound thermodynamic reasons for the occurrence of imperfections in solids. This is inferred in a few places (for example, on pages 8-9 and 78) but is uw where explicitly stated or given any emphasis. Yet more confusing is the astonishing statement on page 93: " . .the thermodynamic requirement for an equilibrium system that it shall achieve the mazimum slate order and the minimum of free energy." The discussion of the phonou (page 2) as "the most fundamental imperfection" lacks clarity. A reader may he easily misled by the description of Schottky defects in ionic lattices (pages 7 to 9). The process indioated in Figure 4 (page 7) is correct for, say, metal but (Continzud on pore A494)

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JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL EDUCATION