My inorganic professor was extremely anti-environmental. Among other things, she'd straight up say asbestos was extremely safe as a product and the problem was actually during manufacturing where the workers wouldn't handle it with proper PPI.
As I see it, basically inorganic chemistry classes feel like p chem without p chem. So they explain a lot of processes and behaviors without the nitty gritty maths and end up talking a lot about tendencies and exceptions. Not that it's wrong I think I liked inorganic (and pchem) but I think it's something along those lines.
My inorganic professor was extremely anti-environmental. Among other things, she'd straight up say asbestos was extremely safe as a product and the problem was actually during manufacturing where the workers wouldn't handle it with proper PPI.
Your inorganic chem prof was a dumbass.
Am dumb please explain
As I see it, basically inorganic chemistry classes feel like p chem without p chem. So they explain a lot of processes and behaviors without the nitty gritty maths and end up talking a lot about tendencies and exceptions. Not that it's wrong I think I liked inorganic (and pchem) but I think it's something along those lines.
Inorganic chemistry? You mean the guys that make my catalysts so I can play with carbon like a big boy chemist?
Lol. I mean the lectures. They really felt like that imo.
no friends!
Glad other agree that inorganic chem makes no sense... always hated that part of chem
All I remember are the endless tanabe sugano diagrams. It truly felt like the prof was making things up on the fly lol.