CHEMISTRY COURSES (CHEM)
101 General Chemistry I: General Concepts in Chemistry (4:3-3)
(Prerequisite: Completion of Mathematics 105 or eligibility to take
Mathematics 111) F, SU. The states of matter, including the gas
laws; stoichiometry; electronic structure and bonding; periodicity;
solutions.
102 General Chemistry II: Introduction to Inorganic Chemistry
(4:3-3) (Prerequisite:101) S, SU. Oxidation-reduction, equilibria,
electrochemistry, thermodynamics, acids and bases, kinetics, chemistry
of the representative elements, coordination compounds of the transition
elements, nuclear chemistry.
150 Chemistry for Everyday Life (4:3-3) (Prerequisite/Eligibility
to take Math 111 or Math 121) F, S, SU. The focus of this course
is on the common chemical language used in general society today.
Special emphasis will be placed on the basic chemistry of currently
"hot topics" such as the depletion of the ozone layer
and alternative energy sources. Topics such as food chemistry, agricultural
chemistry, and the chemistry of household products will be also
addressed. Chemical concepts including stoichiometry, atomic structure,
acid-base chemistry and basic organic chemistry will be integrated
throughout the course. Academic credit may not be received for Chemistry
150 and Chemistry 101.
201-202 Organic Chemistry I and II (4:3-3) (4:3-3) (Prerequisite:
102) 201 F, SU; 202 S, SU. The structure, properties, and important
reactions of organic compounds. Major topics are hydrocarbons, aromatics,
halides, alcohols, acids, esters, aldehydes and ketones, amines,
stereochemistry, carbohydrates, proteins, IR and NMR spectroscopy,
and chemical literature.
203 Analytical Chemistry I: Quantitative Analysis (4:3-4)
(Prerequisite: 102) F. Solution equilibria; evaluation of analytical
data; precipitation theory and precipitate formation; volumetric
and gravimetric principles; acids, bases, and neutralization; oxidation-reduction;
electroanalysis; photometry; complexation analysis; methods of separation.
301-302 Physical Chemistry I and II (4:3-3) (4:3-3) (Prerequisite:
202, Physics 202, and Mathematics 202 or permission of department;
Corequisite: 203 and Mathematics 203) F, S. The states of matter,
thermodynamics, equilibria, solutions and colligative properties,
phase rule, conductance and electrochemistry, kinetics, quantum
chemistry, atomic and molecular structure and chemical bonding,
photochemistry. [Before enrolling in Chemistry 301, a student must
have a 2.0 cumulative average in all courses prerequisite to Chemistry
301. (For information, courses prerequisite to Chemistry 301 are
Chemistry 101-102, 201-202, Mathematics 201, 202 and Physics 201-202.)]
303 Analytical Chemistry II: Instrumental Analysis (4:3-4)
(Prerequisite: 203, 301) S. Electroanalytical and electrogravimetric
methods; potentiometric and coulometric methods; conductometric
titrations; polarography and amperometric titrations; methods based
on infrared, ultraviolet, and visible spectroscopy; flame photometry;
atomic absorption spectrometry; gas chromatographic methods; methods
based on nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy; fluorescence analysis;
mass spectrometry.
313 Environmental Chemistry (4:3-3) (Prerequisite: 203)
AS. Introduction to the chemistry of natural systems with an emphasis
on atmospheric and aquatic chemistry. Sampling and measurement techniques
used to characterize the environment, particularly using electrochemical,
spectroscopic, and chromatographic methods.
402 Inorganic Chemistry II (3) (Prerequisite: 301 or permission
of department) S. Structure of the atom, ionic and covalent bonding
models; group theory; the solid state; advanced acid-base concepts;
chemistry in nonaqueous solvents; structure and reactivity of coordination
compounds; organometallic chemistry; bioinorganic chemistry.
404 Biochemistry (3) (Prerequisite: 202 and one semester
of biology or permission of department) F. Chemistry of biologically
important processes at the molecular level: the chemistry and metabolism
of carbohydrates, proteins, and lipids and the action of vitamins,
hormones, and enzymes.
405 Advanced Methods of Organic Synthesis and Characterization
(4:2-6) (Prerequisite: 202 or permission of department) AF. Content
to be divided between three areas: synthetic organic methods stressing
library and laboratory work in preparative chemistry; physical methods
of characterization including systematic identification of organic
compounds by interpretive spectroscopy; structure and reaction dynamics
including structure and reactivity relationships, molecular rearrangements,
and kinetic techniques to solve problems in reaction mechanisms.
407 Introduction to Polymer Science (3) (Prerequisite: 202
or permission of department) AF. Emphasis on polymer synthesis,
characterization and structure/property relationships; addition
and step-growth polymerizations; glass transition temperature; copolymers;
the amorphous and crystalline states; mechanical properties.
497 Special Studies (3), (2), or (1) (Prerequisite: Permission
of department) F, S. Open only to juniors or seniors with a GPA
of 3.0 or higher in their major courses. A maximum of 3 semester
hours may be earned. Academic Committee approval required for each
seminar and practicum. All individual research projects are reviewed
by three faculty members from two different disciplines.
499 Chemistry Senior Capstone (1) (Prerequisite: at least
24 hours in Chemistry) S. A required course for all senior chemistry
majors as part of the assessment of the chemistry program.
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE COURSE (ENVS)
201 Environmental Science (4:3-3) (Prerequisite: Biology
105, 106; Chemistry 101, 102). Broad introduction to environmental
issues and problems, and their technical solutions through environmental
science applications. Includes discussions of political, economic
and ethical issues.
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