610-310 Physical Chemistry IIIA | |
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Note | Credit cannot be gained for this subject and 610-311 or 610-315. |
Credit Points | 12.5 |
HECS Band | 2 |
Coordinator | Dr F Grieser |
Prerequisites | Chemistry 610-210 or (610-211 and 610-215) (1998: (610-210 or 610-211) and 610-215). |
Semester | 1 (view timetable) |
Contact | 24 lectures (three per week for 8 weeks), 32 hours practical work |
Subject Description | Upon completion of 610-310 students should relate UV-visible spectroscopy to the fates of electronically excited molecules; understand photochemical kinetics and its application to controlling light-induced processes; understand the main concepts of equilibrium electrochemistry and be able to apply electrochemical principles to interpret the behaviour of solutions and galvanic cells; understand the nature of a surface and the phenomena of spreading behaviour of liquids, capillary rise, vapour pressure, superheating, crystal solubility and super-saturation; understand the processes of micelle formation from surfactants and gas adsorption on solids; and have developed skills in experimental techniques and instrumental methods of physical chemistry. The subject covers the topics surface chemistry, electrochemistry, photochemistry, and reactions of reactive intermediates. The practical course will consist of a number of experiments involving the physical and instrumental investigations of important chemical systems and phenomena. |
Assessment | One 2-hour written examination at the end of semester. Assignments not exceeding 12 pages and tests may constitute up to 10% of the final assessment. Practical work will be continuously assessed in the form of short reports. Practical work must be completed satisfactorily before credit can be granted for the subject. |
Status: Official 2002 Last Modified: Tuesday May 07 22:11 SGML to HTML Conversion: Information Technology Services Authorised by: Academic Registrar Email Enquiries: Course_Information@registrar.unimelb.edu.au