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.
Applied chemistry is chemistry at work. The "applied" part means that it's being used to accomplish a particular task. The opposite of applied chemistry is "pure" chemistry, which is chemistry that's being done basically just to see what happens.
Chemistry is a pure science but also an applied science.
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Applied
I suppose that this is an example of applied chemistry.
IUPAC(international union of pure and applied chemistry)
The full form of IUPAC is International Union of pure and applied chemistry
Applied chemistry, of course! Applied chemistry is as the name implies - it's taking chemistry and creating an application - in this particular case, the "application" is dry or damaged hair.
Applied
Do not worry you aren't the first to ask this. These are the answers simplified and sciencified. Pure science is something with a lab component, examples are biology, chemistry, physics, anatomy and physiology. An applied science is a science that incorporates many sciences such as fire science or nutrition. Simplified:Yeah stick to pure science unless you really know what you want to do and there are plety of jobs in that field - specify later on. Pure: Hey the apple fell to the ground because of gravity. Applied: Oww the spanner fell on my foot because of gravity ;-)
Its a delusion of science.
I suppose that this is an example of applied chemistry.
pure science is generally the dry-labs bit, whereas applied is more practical
apllied
It is applied math. Math is the purest form there is. psychology is applied biology, which is applied chemistry, which is applied physics, which is applied math, which is pure PURE
International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry.
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.
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.
IUPAC(international union of pure and applied chemistry)
The full form of IUPAC is International Union of pure and applied chemistry