Several areas of chemistry rely on physical chemistry concepts. For instance:
Thermodynamics and reaction rates: biochemistry and enzymology
Electron-nucleus interactions: mechanisms in organic chemistry
Excited state transitions: spectroscopy in analytical chemistry
Solubility: biomolecules (biochemistry), separations (analytical chemistry)
But no set branch is next to another, the concepts lend themselves all over the board.
physical chemistry is the branch of scince and which deal with the petroliume
Physical chemistry is a branch of chemistry in which physics has a special contribution.
Chemistry is considered to be a physical science.
Chemistry is considered one of the physical sciences and a "hard" science.
Chemistry
This depends on the nature of substances: organic or inorganic.
INORGANIC CHemistry. The chemistry of carbon molecules is ORGANIC Chemistry. There is a thirs branch of chemistry it is 'PHYSICAL Chemistry', dealing with calculation, energy changes etc.,
No... it is not a branch of chemistry.. there are many branches, but mainly there are physical, inorganic, organic, theoritical these are sub divided again..
The branch of physical science studies the properties of matter and changes in matter is known as chemistry. This is a branch which is mainly concerned with atoms and molecules and how they interact.
organic/inorganic/physical/analytical/industrial
This branch of chemistry is called analytical chemistry.
Chemistry is a branch of science and there are many specialized branches. Ten specialized branches of chemistry are nuclear chemistry, biochemistry, analytical chemistry, inorganic chemistry, thermochemistry, polymer chemistry, physical chemistry, medical chemistry, geochemistry and medicinal chemistry.