Inorganic Chemistry (Volume I and Volume II), Third Edition, edited by Wuhan University and Jilin University, Higher Education Press, 1994.
Chemistry edited by T.L. Brown, H.E. Lemay Jr. and B.E. Burstein: Central Science, 165438+ 0 th Edition. Prentiss Hall, 2008.
Analytical chemistry:
Analytical Chemistry (4th Edition)? Editor-in-Chief of Wuhan University? Higher Education Press? 2000
Physical chemistry:
Physical Chemistry Fu Fifth Edition Higher Education Press
Organic chemistry:
Basic Organic Chemistry (Ⅰ) Xing? Higher education press
The above are the four basic knowledge textbooks of chemistry. If you study systematically, you should also study inorganic chemistry experiment, analytical chemistry experiment, organic chemistry experiment, physical chemistry experiment, instrumental analysis, chemical English and related elective courses.
If you want to teach yourself systematically, I suggest you give up for the following reasons:
1, chemical professional knowledge is complex and unsystematic. If you don't master the correct learning methods, your learning efficiency will be very low (it is common for students majoring in chemistry to fail).
2. Self-study by perseverance alone is very slow, especially physical chemistry and organic chemistry, which are relatively slow to develop (chemistry students can't fully master them in one year), and they need tutors to teach them to improve quickly.
3. Chemistry is an experiment-oriented subject, and all the knowledge you have learned should be applied to the laboratory or practice, which means that chemical experiment skills are more important than professional knowledge! However, chemical experiments need certain supporting facilities (laboratories, instruments and equipment, funds) to support them, if self-study simply does not have such conditions.
If you want to broaden your knowledge and cultivate your interest, you can take a look at the above four basic chemistry courses (systematic learning can never be won in four or five years)