- Doc Brown's page with links to dozens of periodic tables and page of the elements.
- A Periodic Table favored by many NEIU students for its explanations of atomic number, mass, arrangement, boiling and melting points, and crystal structure. Well laid out and easy to understand.
- Comic Book Elements with links and other comic relief in Chemistry.
- Visual Elements, a periodic table which presents the 109 known elements in a creative and unusual manner. Sponsored by the Royal Society of Chemistry.
- The Chemist's Art Gallery. Watch multicolored molecules and animated atoms on this site maintained by the Finland Center for Scientific Computing.
- The Molecule of the Month page shows images from sites around the world.
- Data for
General, Inorganic, Organic, and Physical Chemistry from The Wired Chemist.
- Tutorials on Chemistry and sorted links to dictionaries, properties, safety and news.
- Royal Society of Chemistry contains links to a network of 30 national chemistry societies.
- Rosen's Chemistry Resources for high school teachers and students provides a wealth of chemistry information.
- Entropy -- the topic students most dread -- is actually simple, now! writes the author of the Entropy site, an emeritus professor of Chemistry.
- The Second Law of Thermodynamics and Shakespeare described as "The most surprising bridge from chemistry to understanding why things happen to us" by Prof. Flambert.
- Buckyballs. State University of New York, Stony Brook site about fullerenes, special carbon molecules formed from 60 individual carbons.
- Direct Textbook provides an easy way to buy textbooks for all disciplines. Their site loads quickly and is very easy to use.
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