Inorganic chemistry would include electrochemistry, making batteries, and Metallurgy, making alloys that can withstand high temperatures, jet engine fan blades ET etc.
Inorganic elements of biological materials are components that are not naturally produced. This is often used to reference molecules in chemistry that are synthetic or man made.
Inorganic chemistry is a branch of chemistry that focuses on the properties and behavior of inorganic compounds, while general chemistry covers all basic principles and concepts of chemistry, including inorganic chemistry. General chemistry is a broader discipline that encompasses various branches of chemistry, including inorganic chemistry.
T. W. Swaddle has written: 'Applied Inorganic Chemistry' 'Inorganic chemistry' -- subject(s): Chemistry, Inorganic, Environmental chemistry, Inorganic Chemistry
There are five main major branches of chemistry. They are organic, inorganic, physical, analytical and bio chemistry.Organic chemistry includes stereochemistry, medicinal chemistry, organometallic chemistry, physical organic chemistry and polymer chemistry. Inorganic chemistry includes bioinorganic chemistry, coordination chemistry, geochemistry, inorganic technology, nuclear chemistry, organometallic chemistry, solid state chemistry, synthetic inorganic chemistry and industrial inorganic chemistry.Physical chemistry is divided into electrochemistry, photochemistry, surface chemistry, chemical chemistry, thermodynamics, quantum mechanics and spectroscopy.Analytical chemistry is divided into qualitative and quantitative analysis. Biochemistry is divided into enzymology, endocrinology, clinical biochemistry and molecular biochemistry.
R. T. Sanderson has written: 'Inorganic chemistry' -- subject(s): Inorganic Chemistry 'Teaching chemistry with models' 'Simple inorganic substances' -- subject(s): Inorganic Chemistry 'Fundamentals of modern chemistry' -- subject(s): Chemistry
Fearnside Hudson has written: 'Inorganic chemistry, for science classes' -- subject(s): Chemistry, Inorganic, Inorganic Chemistry
there are five branches: inorganic, organic, analytical, physical, and biochemistry. they could be further broken down into sub-branches such as organometallic chemistry, physical organic chemistry, electroanalytical chemistry, and so on and so forth.
If organic chemistry study the chemistry of carbon compounds the inorganic chemistry stydy the remaining part.
Inorganic chemistry is the chemistry of compounds that don't contain the hydrocarbon radicals.
Arnold Frederik Holleman has written: 'A text-book of inorganic chemistry' -- subject(s): Chemistry, Inorganic, Inorganic Chemistry
James E. Huheey has written: 'Answers to problems in Inorganic chemistry' -- subject(s): Inorganic Chemistry, Study and teaching 'Inorganic chemistry; principles of structure and reactivity' -- subject(s): Inorganic Chemistry
You need to understand inorganic chemistry (such as what will dissolve in what), organic chemistry (such as what will react with what) and biochemistry (how the last two combine within living systems).