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http://worldcat.org/entity/work/id/55326365

The Mole

Program 11 explains that a mole of any substance contains a constant number of atoms or molecules, demonstrating the use of this important quantitative chemistry term from small laboratory settings to large-scale industrial processes.

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  • "Program 11 explains that a mole of any substance contains a constant number of atoms or molecules, demonstrating the use of this important quantitative chemistry term from small laboratory settings to large-scale industrial processes."@en
  • "Program 11 explains that a mole of any substance contains a constant number of atoms or molecules. Also examines the use of this important quantitative chemistry term, from small laboratory settings to large-scale industrial processes. Program 12 explores why water is unique and necessary for life and describes its chemical properties. Protection and conservation are addressed."@en
  • "The mole is the foundation on which quantitative chemistry rests allowing chemists to count by weighing."@en
  • "With examples ranging from small laboratory tests to large scale industrial processes, Roald Hoffman shows how the concept of the mole is used by chemists to calculate precise amounts of reactants."@en
  • "One of the most significant concepts in chemistry, the mole is the foundation on which quantitative chemistry rests."
  • "Uses the mole to explain chemical change from a quantitative point of view, with examples from small laboratory settings to large-scale industrial processes."@en
  • "With examples ranging from small laboratory tests to large-scale industrial processes, Hoffmann shows how the concept of the mole is used by chemists to calculate precise amounts of reactants."@en
  • "The 1st program explains that a mole of any substance contains a constant number of atoms or molecules. Also examines the use of this important quantitative chemistry term. The 2nd program explains why water is unique and necessary for life and explores the special chemical properties of water."@en
  • "The 1st program explains that a mole of any substance contains a constant number of atoms or molecules. Also examines the use of this important quantitative chemistry term. The 2nd program explains why water is unique and necessary for life and explores the special chemical properties of water."
  • ""Explains chemical change from a quantitative point of view, using examples from small laboratory settings and large-scale industrial process. Highlights: historical background, breakthrough, and applications."--Magic Lantern Web site."@en
  • "Explains that a mole of any substance contains a constant number of atoms or molecules. Also examines the use of this important quantitative chemistry term."@en
  • ""Using Avogadro's law, the mass of a substance can be related to the number of particles contained in that mass."--Container."@en

http://schema.org/genre

  • "Video recordings for the hearing impaired"@en
  • "Digital video"@en
  • "Streaming multimedia"@en
  • "Video"@en

http://schema.org/name

  • "The Mole"@en
  • "The Mole"
  • "The mole"
  • "The mole"@en