The textbook's end-of-chapter problems are not simple plug-and-chug exercises. They are often pulled directly from primary peer-reviewed literature, reflecting modern chemical research.
If you try to read it like a novel or memorize reactions as isolated facts, you’ll struggle.
The text covers essential topics required for modern synthesis, including: Functional Group Transformations:
– Professor Smith is the author, but he often acknowledges the monumental work of Jerry March (author of March’s Advanced Organic Chemistry ). In academic circles, "Nantz" sometimes gets confused with "March." However, more recently, the confusion arises from Dr. Gregory Nantz , a co-author on certain lab manuals or specific editions of spectroscopy supplements. When students hunt for the "Nantz PDF," they almost always want the Smith & March textbook.
The textbook's end-of-chapter problems are not simple plug-and-chug exercises. They are often pulled directly from primary peer-reviewed literature, reflecting modern chemical research.
If you try to read it like a novel or memorize reactions as isolated facts, you’ll struggle.
The text covers essential topics required for modern synthesis, including: Functional Group Transformations:
– Professor Smith is the author, but he often acknowledges the monumental work of Jerry March (author of March’s Advanced Organic Chemistry ). In academic circles, "Nantz" sometimes gets confused with "March." However, more recently, the confusion arises from Dr. Gregory Nantz , a co-author on certain lab manuals or specific editions of spectroscopy supplements. When students hunt for the "Nantz PDF," they almost always want the Smith & March textbook.