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NMR: The Toolkit

NMR: The Toolkit

How Pulse Sequences Work

by Peter HoreJonathan Jones and Stephen Wimperis
Paperback
Publication Date: 21/05/2015

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$61.95
The renowned Oxford Chemistry Primer series, which provides focused introductions to a range of important topics in chemistry, has been refreshed and updated to suit the needs of today's students, lecturers, and postgraduate researchers. The rigorous, yet accessible, treatment of each subject area is ideal for those wanting a primer in a given topic to prepare them for more advanced study or research. Moreover, cutting-edge examples and applications throughout the
texts show the relevance of the chemistry being described to current research and industry. The learning features provided, including questions at the end of every chapter and
online multiple-choice questions, encourage active learning and promote understanding. Furthermore, frequent diagrams, margin notes, further reading, and glossary definitions all help to enhance a student's understanding of these essential areas of chemistry.NMR: The Toolkit describes succinctly the range of NMR techniques commonly used in modern research to probe the structures and properties of molecules in liquids. Emphasis is placed throughout on how these
experiments actually work, giving a unique perspective on this powerful experimental tool.Online Resource CentreThe Online Resource Centre to accompany NMR The Toolkit: How Pulse
Sequences Work features:For registered adopters of the text:* Figures from the book available to downloadFor students: * Full worked solutions to the end-of-chapter exercises
ISBN:
9780198703426
9780198703426
Category:
Nuclear chemistry
Format:
Paperback
Publication Date:
21-05-2015
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Country of origin:
United Kingdom
Edition:
2nd Edition
Pages:
136
Dimensions (mm):
247x190x7mm
Weight:
0.24kg
Peter Hore

Peter Hore is the author of several biographies and, for the last dozen years, a freelance obituarist at the Daily Telegraph.

He served a full career in the Royal Navy, spent nine years in the film and TV industry, and is now a full-time writer, editor and journalist. He is an elected fellow of the Royal Historical Society, and a member of the Institute of Linguists.

Jonathan Jones

Jonathan Jones is the art critic for The Guardian newspaper. He was on the jury for the 2009 Turner Prize and is the author of The Loves of the Artists: Art and Passion in the Renaissance and The Lost Battles: Leonardo, Michelangelo and the Artistic Duel that Defined the Renaissance.

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