Pure chemistry is the study of what something is, while applied chemistry is the application of that knowledge to a specific aim. The fundamentals of chemistry are pure chemistry and organic chemistry. Only knowing why or what something is more important than knowing what you can do with it. Pure chemistry is concerned with the question of "why is this that way" or "how does this operate," and seeks to answer it.
Applied chemistry is a branch of science concerned with understanding the fundamental chemical properties of materials and developing novel materials with precise uses. The practise of applying past knowledge to attain a goal is known as applied chemistry. Consider applied chemistry as the study and application of information with the objective of assisting (or potentially harming) people or the environment.
Title : Rational design of battery cathode materials
Kyeongjae Cho, University of Texas at Dallas, United States
Title : Pharmaceutical chemistry studies of novel biologics and drugs for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
Yong Xiao Wang, Albany Medical College, United States
Title : Theoretical modeling in organic nanophotonics: Processes and devices
Alexander Bagaturyants, Retired, Israel
Title : Hot atom chemistry - Past, present and future
Shree Niwas Chaturvedi, Centre for Aptitude Analysis and Talent Search, India
Title : Chemical engineering of vanadium, titanium or chromium zeolites for application in environmental catalysis
Stanislaw Dzwigaj, Sorbonne Université, France
Title : Distal functionalization via transition metal catalysis
Haibo Ge, Texas Tech University, United States