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Inorganic chemistry

From Biocrawler, the free encyclopedia.

Inorganic chemistry is the branch of chemistry concerned with the properties and reactions of inorganic compounds. This includes all chemical compounds except the many which are based upon chains or rings of carbon atoms, which are termed organic compounds and are studied under the separate heading of organic chemistry. The distinction between the two disciplines is not absolute and there is much overlap, most importantly in the sub-discipline of organometallic chemistry.

Categories of inorganic chemical reactions

There are four categories of inorganic chemical reactions: combination reactions, decomposition reactions, single displacement reactions, and double displacement reactions.

Branches of inorganic chemistry

Major branches of inorganic chemistry include

Commercially important inorganic substances include silicon chips, transistors, LCD screens, fiber optical cables and a great many catalysts.

Inorganic chemistry is based upon physical chemistry and forms the basis for mineralogy and materials chemistry. It often overlaps with geochemistry, analytical chemistry, environmental chemistry and organometallic chemistry.

Organometallic chemistry combines aspects of organic chemistry with those of inorganic chemistry, and is formally defined as the study of compounds containing metal-carbon bonds, although many "organometallic compounds" contain no such bonds. Among the simplest organometallic compounds are the metal carbonyls, in which carbon monoxide binds to a metal through the carbon. Vitamin B12, whose active site is similar to that of haemoglobin, is a naturally-occurring, metabolically-important organometallic compound containing large organic components (corrin and protein) and a metal, cobalt, bonded to carbon.

The range of inorganic chemistry includes both molecular compounds, which exist as discrete molecules, and crystals, whose structures are described by infinite lattices of regularly-ordered atoms and which are studied by crystallography and solid-state chemistry.

See also Important publications in inorganic chemistry


Chemistry

Analytical chemistry | Organic chemistry | Inorganic chemistry | Physical chemistry | Polymer chemistry | Biochemistry | Materials science | Environmental chemistry | Medicinal chemistry | Pharmacy | Thermochemistry | Electrochemistry | Nuclear chemistry | Computational chemistry | Photochemistry
Periodic table | List of inorganic compounds | List of organic compounds | List of biomolecules
af:Anorganiese chemie

ar:كيمياء لاعضوية ca:Qumica Inorgnica da:Uorganisk kemies:Qumica inorgnica fr:Chimie inorganique gl:Qumica inorgnica it:Chimica inorganica he:כימיה אנאורגנית la:Chemica Inorganica lv:Neorganiskā ķīmija nl:Anorganische chemie ja:無機化学 nds:Anorganisch Chemie pl:Chemia nieorganiczna ru:Неорганическая химия su:Kimia anorganik sv:Oorganisk kemi vi:Hóa vô cơ zh:无机化学

Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page) Inorganic_chemistry (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inorganic_chemistry) version history (http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Inorganic_chemistry&action=history) GNU Free Documentation Lizenz (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Text_of_the_GNU_Free_Documentation_License) CC-by-sa (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5/)

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