ALC

Ohaulick
Oct 28, 2010
46,701
Thermo is plenty of calculations, not hard, but a bit harder than molarity limiting reagents and etc, a bit tricky. You need to work on solving problem sets and previous exams. The best way to study thermo, and figure out all the tricks.
You probably have the first year chem book, but if you need another one, I do recommend Basic Chemistry by Frank Cotton and Geoffrey Wilkinson. A great book to cover basic chemistry.
Check out the school library. They should have it. Good luck
Nigga please.

Yo Andy, it's supposed to rain three inches over here, what the big deal be?
 

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Delle Alpi

Chemical Dean
May 26, 2009
8,679
Lol, the concepts itself aren't hard. Working some of the problems can take ages however. You have to consider everything and be incredibly precise.
that's why sloving problems constantly should help in figuring out all the tricks and concepts involved. One mistake would lead to a whole disaster, you have to be careful
I wasn't a fan of phys chem back in undergrad, that's why I stayed away from it in grad school.
 

ALC

Ohaulick
Oct 28, 2010
46,701
that's why sloving problems constantly should help in figuring out all the tricks and concepts involved. One mistake would lead to a whole disaster, you have to be careful
I wasn't a fan of phys chem back in undergrad, that's why I stayed away from it in grad school.
:agree:

Listen to him Kasaki and you'll be learning from the master.
 

Dragon

Senior Member
Apr 24, 2003
27,407
that's why sloving problems constantly should help in figuring out all the tricks and concepts involved. One mistake would lead to a whole disaster, you have to be careful
I wasn't a fan of phys chem back in undergrad, that's why I stayed away from it in grad school.
Extrapolation is what killed me in thermo
 

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