Help a Physics grad read up on Chemistry

AI Thread Summary
A graduate student with a background in Physics is seeking recommendations for basic chemistry learning materials, as they lack a foundational understanding of the subject. They prefer resources that are concise yet scientifically accurate, avoiding standard undergraduate textbooks due to time constraints. Suggestions include "General Chemistry" by Linus Pauling and calculus-based texts like "Chemical Principles" and "Molecular Quantum Mechanics," which are noted for their rigor and ability to allow for selective reading. The student appreciates the advice and plans to explore the recommended books.
Zoroaster
Messages
10
Reaction score
0
Hi all,

I am a grad student with a Physics BSc. For various reasons, I have never actually done a basic pure chemistry course, even at high school level. Naturally, I have come across many concepts from chemistry in my courses, but I lack the fundamental overview of the field, and I am very shaky on many of the basic terms and concepts. I therefore decided that I need to look into basic [sic] chemistry. I'm hoping that someone here might be of assistance in deciding on some learning materials.

I am hoping to find something else than a standard chemistry undergraduate book. As a grad student, I don't have oceans of time to devote to this (sadly), but I'm not looking for anything sugarcoated that risks going on behalf of scientific accuracy either. Ideally, a short, well written book introducing the fundamental concepts would be great (asking quite a lot here, I know).

Any suggestions?

Thanks a bunch
 
Physics news on Phys.org
couple of Atkins' texts

A calculus based honors introduction to chemistry: Chemical Principles and the upper division Molecular Quantum Mechanics are up-to-date and worth looking at. Neither is short but they don't sugar coat and you can skip around.
 
mindheavy said:

As a former student of chemistry who switched to physics, I second this. I consider it the Halliday-Resnick of chemistry.
 
Thanks a lot guys, excellent advice. I've ordered the Pauling book and will have a look at the other ones in the library.
 
TL;DR Summary: Book after Sakurai Modern Quantum Physics I am doing a comprehensive reading of sakurai and I have solved every problem from chapters I finished on my own, I will finish the book within 2 weeks and I want to delve into qft and other particle physics related topics, not from summaries but comprehensive books, I will start a graduate program related to cern in 3 months, I alreadily knew some qft but now I want to do it, hence do a good book with good problems in it first...
TLDR: is Blennow "Mathematical Methods for Physics and Engineering" a good follow-up to Altland "Mathematics for physicists"? Hello everybody, returning to physics after 30-something years, I felt the need to brush up my maths first. It took me 6 months and I'm currently more than half way through the Altland "Mathematics for physicists" book, covering the math for undergraduate studies at the right level of sophystication, most of which I howewer already knew (being an aerospace engineer)...

Similar threads

Replies
9
Views
4K
Replies
4
Views
2K
Replies
3
Views
3K
Replies
8
Views
3K
Replies
3
Views
3K
Replies
43
Views
7K
Back
Top