No, the inorganic chemistry is only a chapter of the chemistry.
Try the Modern's ABC of Inorganic Chemistry.
Journal of Biological Inorganic Chemistry was created in 1996.
Inorganic chemistry. (A few compounds that DO contain carbon are part of inorganic chemistry too.)
Both organic chemistry and inorganic chemistry are important branches of chemistry, each with its own unique characteristics and applications. Organic chemistry primarily studies carbon-based compounds, including many found in living organisms, while inorganic chemistry focuses on non-carbon compounds. The choice of which is "better" depends on the specific interests and career goals of the individual.
The study of all substances not included in organic chemistry is called inorganic chemistry. It focuses on the properties and behavior of inorganic compounds, which typically do not contain carbon-hydrogen bonds found in organic molecules. Inorganic chemistry deals with materials such as metals, minerals, and non-carbon-containing compounds like salts and coordination complexes.
general inorganic chemistry
J. A. Duffy has written: 'General inorganic chemistry' -- subject(s): Inorganic Chemistry
"General chemistry" may be considered the easiest type of chemistry for beginners as it covers foundational concepts and principles.
T. W. Swaddle has written: 'Applied Inorganic Chemistry' 'Inorganic chemistry' -- subject(s): Chemistry, Inorganic, Environmental chemistry, Inorganic Chemistry
Some courses related to chemistry include general chemistry, organic chemistry, physical chemistry, analytical chemistry, biochemistry, and inorganic chemistry. These courses cover various aspects of the field such as chemical reactions, molecular structures, thermodynamics, spectroscopy, and chemical bonding, among others.
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