610-142 Chemistry B

Note

Credit cannot be gained for this subject and 610-122, 610-162 or 610-052.

Credit Points

12.5

Coordinator

A/Prof W D McFadyen

Prerequisites

Chemistry 610-141, 610-161 or 610-121. Students with a high level of achievement in 610-171 or 202-101 may be permitted to enrol in 610-142 upon successful completion of the chemistry 610-141 computer-aided learning modules during the winter recess.

Semester

2, repeat Summer (view timetable)

Contact

In Semester 2, 36 lectures (three per week), eight 3-hour sessions of practical work, 10 hours of tutorials and 9 hours of problem-solving/computer-aided learning. In Summer Semester, presented over a six week period: 36 lectures (six per week), six 3-hour sessions of practical work, 12 hours of tutorials, and 9 hours of problem-solving/computer-aided learning

Subject Description

On completion of 610-142, the student should have an understanding of the reactivity of organic molecules; the nature of chemical change; the structure of the atom; and the structure and reactivity of metal compounds.

In the practical component, students should develop basic laboratory skills (observation, analytical techniques, report writing); oral communication skills; independent learning skills; an appreciation of the health and safety issues associated with the safe handling and disposal of laboratory chemicals.

The subject provides an introduction to organic acids and bases; nucleophilic substitution reactions; elimination reactions; addition reactions; electrophilic aromatic substitution reactions; nucleophilic addition reactions; organic redox reactions; chemical kinetics; atomic spectra and atomic structure; redox reactions and electrochemistry; and transition metal and coordination chemistry

Assessment

A three-hour written examination at the end of semester (75%); mid-semester test (5%) and practical assessment (20%). Practical work must be completed satisfactorily before credit can be granted for the subject.

Prescribed Texts

  • S Zumdahl, Chemical Principles. 4th edn, Houghton Mifflin, 2002.
  • J McMurry, Organic Chemistry. 6th edn, Thomson Brooks/Cole, 2004.


Status:                   Official 2005
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