*If a person has completed the graduation and wanted to do the Phd, it would in my opinion be better to do the Phd in organic chemisty because it will be easier for a person who has studied the subject.
*But if he goes for Nanotechnology in this subject you should also have the knowlege of physics as nanotech deals with the particle size less then 100 nm and it is nothing to relate with the chemisty unless u create some new compound using nano particles
Organic Chemistry is probably easier, but in inorganic chemistry you will learn more. So academically speaking Inorganic Chemistry
The design of gasoline and fuels are an interdisciplinary subject matter. Gasoline is a hydrocarbon, and thus an organic by definition. Chemical and Petroleum Engineering involve organic chemistry knowledge and applications.
Vitamins would better be categorized as catalysts (to help chemical reactions in plants and animals). "Organic" has to do with whether it is carbon-based (at least in chemistry it does). Not sure what you mean by "Growth Factors"...
1) Drugs-Better, faster, more selective, fewer side effects (pharmaceuticals) 2) Combating the global environmental crisis (environmental chemistry) 3)Food preservation (food chemistry) 4)New materials will enable technology to break conventional limits (material science/nanotechnology) 5)Understanding life at the molecular level (biochemistry) Nick A.Toon
In terms of chemistry class, all vitamins are organic molecules because they are made of carbon backbones with various functional groups and reactive sites on them. In terms of marketing, there is no such thing as an "inorganic" vitamin - the choice would be between "organic" and "synthetic". Here the difference is what exactly made the vitamin - the actual vitamin is the exact same thing.
Organic Chemistry is probably easier, but in inorganic chemistry you will learn more. So academically speaking Inorganic Chemistry
The design of gasoline and fuels are an interdisciplinary subject matter. Gasoline is a hydrocarbon, and thus an organic by definition. Chemical and Petroleum Engineering involve organic chemistry knowledge and applications.
now adays smaller is better
Vitamins would better be categorized as catalysts (to help chemical reactions in plants and animals). "Organic" has to do with whether it is carbon-based (at least in chemistry it does). Not sure what you mean by "Growth Factors"...
is nanotechnology better than electronics
alchemy is better than chemistry although chemistry is fun to do
Applications of chemistry in industries are vast and expansive. Chemistry is required for a wide range of industries such as cosmetics, nanotechnology, synthetic material, and the list goes on and on. The reality of the situation is that many new products whether it is a new drug or a new lubricant, the chances are that it was a product of new applications of chemistry.
Organic food is better than non-organic because it contains more nutrients.
Nanotechnology is better than biotechnology as nanotechnology can be applied to different career fields like electronics, medical, robotics, engineering and agriculture. So students from diverse fields can enter it. Biotechnology is limited to agriculture and pharmaceuticals. Salary, employment benefits and future growth prospects are very high as compared to Biotechnology.
Whatever Organic is better than normal because organic food are free of chemicals and pesicides.
A bean will grow better in dirt not organic.
Yes. There are less chemicals in organic skin care products than non-organic and therefore is better for your skin. http://www.organicsanonymous.com/