Go back

Naturally Occurring Organohalogen Compounds A Comprehensive Update(1st Edition)

Authors:

Gordon W. Gribble

Free naturally occurring organohalogen compounds a comprehensive update 1st edition gordon w. gribble 3709110998,
7 ratings
Cover Type:Hardcover
Condition:Used

In Stock

Shipment time

Expected shipping within 2 Days
Access to 30 Million+ solutions Free
Ask 50 Questions from expert AI-Powered Answers
7 days-trial

Total Price:

$0

List Price: $284.47 Savings: $284.47(100%)
Access to 30 Million+ solutions
Ask 50 Questions from expert AI-Powered Answers 24/7 Tutor Help Detailed solutions for Naturally Occurring Organohalogen Compounds A Comprehensive Update

Price:

$9.99

/month

Book details

ISBN: 3709110998, 978-3709110997

Book publisher: Springer

Get your hands on the best-selling book Naturally Occurring Organohalogen Compounds A Comprehensive Update 1st Edition for free. Feed your curiosity and let your imagination soar with the best stories coming out to you without hefty price tags. Browse SolutionInn to discover a treasure trove of fiction and non-fiction books where every page leads the reader to an undiscovered world. Start your literary adventure right away and also enjoy free shipping of these complimentary books to your door.

Book Summary: Despite the long association of organohalogen compounds with human activities, nature is the producer of nearly 5,000 halogen-containing chemicals. Once dismissed as accidents of nature or isolation artifacts, organohalogen compounds represent an important and ever growing class of natural products, in many cases exhibiting exceptional biological activity. Since the last comprehensive review in 1996 (Vol. 68, this series), there have been discovered an additional 2,500 organochlorine, organobromine, and other organohalogen compounds. These natural organohalogens are biosynthesized by bacteria, fungi, lichen, plants, marine organisms of all types, insects, and higher animals including humans. These compounds are also formed abiogenically, as in volcanoes, forest fires, and other geothermal events.In some instances, natural organohalogens are precisely the same chemicals that man synthesizes for industrial use, and some of the quantities of these natural chemicals far exceed the quantities emitted by man.