Pure chemistry is the use of formulas to come up with what SHOULD happen in an experiment. Because we live in an imperfect world, no experiment will work exactly as it is supposed to according to the equations. This is applied chemistry.
Laboratory research in applied chemistry is the first step to industrial chemistry.
The culinary art can be considered a form of applied chemistry - chemistry of foods !
Chemistry is the study of matter, it's components, and their relationships between each other.
Trigonometry is the study of the relationships between the sides and the angles of triangles and with the trigonometric functions, which describe those relationships.
extended relationship
Pure chemistry like the way it is termed, refers to the study of only pure theory of chemistry, e.g. Organic Chemistry, Inorganic chemistry, Physical chemistry etc. Mostly, one's aim is to seek more answers to academic questions and to enlarge the pool of information that previous chemists already have at hand. Applied chemistry, is often the bridge between chemistry and chemical engineering (large scale-process industries). Not only is it a study on the basic chemistry principles (organic chemistry, inorganic chemistry), it is also the study of analytical instruments and apparatus used in industrial work. More often than not, it is also the study of plant-based work, e.g.how does a heat exchanger work? How do we utilize the HPLC to the fullest. There is only a fine line that divides pure chemistry and applied chemistry.
Pure chemistry involves research in pursuit of knowledge. Applied chemistry involves research directed toward a specific goal. Pure research can lead directly to an application; an application can exist before research is done to explain how it works.
That's a Venn diagram.
Pure chemistry refers to pure research - just trying to figure out the properties of existing matter. Applied chemistry means you are using scientific knowledge of chemistry in order to solve a human problem. For example, chemical medicines are an example of applied chemistry.
One possibility is a Venn diagram.
They both describe relationships between numbers.
Flegea is strictly inappropriate language used to describe abusive relationships between boys and girls.