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CHEMISTRY COURSES
CHM 101. BASIC CONCEPTS IN CHEMISTRY 3 sh
The course is designed to meet the math/science general studies requirement
for non-science majors. The material covered includes atomic structure,
chemical changes, descriptive chemistry of selected elements, introduction
to organic chemistry, and how chemistry applies to consumer products and
the environment. No credit given to students with prior credit for CHM
111. No credit for major/minor. Corequisite: CHM 102. Offered fall, winter,
spring.
CHM 102. BASIC CONCEPTS IN CHEMISTRY LABORATORY 1 sh
Laboratory exercises are based upon selected foundational concepts covered
in CHM 101. No credit for students with prior credit for CHM 113. No credit
for major/minor. Corequisite: CHM 101. Offered fall, winter, spring.
CHM 111. GENERAL CHEMISTRY I 3 sh
This course introduces fundamental principles of chemistry with special
emphasis on developing skills in quantitative reasoning.Topics include
stoichiometry, nomenclature, gases, atomic structure and periodicity,
and thermochemistry. Prerequisite: High school chemistry. Corequisites:
MTH 111 or higher and CHM 113. Offered fall and spring.
CHM 112. GENERAL CHEMISTRY II 3 sh
The study of fundamental chemical principles continues with chemical kinetics,
liquid/ solid states, chemical equilibrium (gas phase and acid/base),
nuclear chemistry and electrochemistry. Prerequisite: CHM 111. Corequisite:
CHM 114. Offered spring.
CHM 113. GENERAL CHEMISTRY I LABORATORY 1 sh
The experiments offered familiarize students with basic laboratory techniques
and complement topics discussed in CHM 111. Corequisite: CHM 111. Offered
fall and spring.
CHM 114. GENERAL CHEMISTRY II LABORATORY 1 sh
This course involves laboratory applications of concepts and principles
discussed in CHM 112. Prerequisites: CHM 111, 113. Corequisite: CHM 112.
Offered spring and fall (for CHM 115 only).
CHM 115. ADVANCED GENERAL CHEMISTRY 3 sh
This course explores fundamental principles of chemistry with an emphasis
on under-standing chemical concepts and quantitative reasoning. It consists
of a brief review of stoichiometry, nomenclature, gases, thermochemistry,
atomic structure and periodicity and more extensive coverage of chemical
kinetics, electrochemistry, equilibrium systems, liquid/solid states and
nuclear chemistry.This course is available for students who scored 4 or
5 on the AP chemistry exam, and for students with exemplary scores on
the Toledo exam. Prerequisites: High school chemistry. Corequisite: CHM
116. Offered fall.
CHM 116. ADVANCED GENERAL CHEMISTRY LAB 1 sh
This course involves laboratory applications of concepts and principles
discussed in CHM 115 including mass spectrometry, atomic spectroscopy,
molecular modeling, stoichiometry, thermochemistry, chemical kinetics,
electrochemistry, equilibrium systems and liquid and solid states. Corequisite:
CHM 115. Offered fall (for CHM 115 only).
CHM 125. CHEMICAL LITERATURE 1 sh
This writing-intensive course is centered around an in-depth study of
the different ways in which new discoveries in chemistry are communicated
to members of the profession.Topics include primary and secondary sources:
journals, monographs, patents, communications and reviews as well as foremost
references such as Chemical Abstracts, The Ring Index and Science Citation
Index. Both classical and online search methods will be integrated into
the required writing assignments. Prerequisite: CHM 111. Offered spring.
CHM 205. INORGANIC CHEMISTRY 4 sh
This course will be an introduction to the field of inorganic chemistry
with emphasis on classical coordination chemistry, solid state chemistry,
the periodic relationships of the elements, the origin of the elements,
and the chemistry of hydrogen and oxygen. It will also serve as an introduction
to the use of physical methods of structure determination of inorganic
compounds by magnetic and spectral techniques including magnetic susceptibility,
UV/VIS and IR spectroscopies, and NMR spectrometry. Prerequisites: CHM
112/114 or CHM 115/116. Offered spring.
CHM 211. ORGANIC CHEMISTRY I 3 sh
Organic Chemistry introduces students to the chemistry of carbon compounds,
including nomenclature, the influence of structure on physical/chemical
properties, reaction mechanisms, stereochemistry, conformational analysis,
synthesis and characteristic reactions of different organic compounds.
Prerequisites: CHM 112/114 or CHM 115/116. Corequisite: CHM 213. Offered
fall.
CHM 212. ORGANIC CHEMISTRY II 3 sh
Continuing the study of organic chemistry, this course emphasizes compounds
containing oxygen or nitrogen and culminates with a survey of lipids,
carbohydrates and proteins. Prerequisites: CHM 211/213. Corequisite: CHM
214. Offered spring.
CHM 213. ORGANIC CHEMISTRY I LABORATORY 1 sh
Laboratory work includes determination of physical properties, separation
of mixtures, some structure identification and synthesis of selected organic
compounds. Prerequisites:CHM 112/114 or 115/116. Corequisite: CHM 211.
Offered fall.
CHM 214. ORGANIC CHEMISTRY II LABORATORY 1 sh
Procedures include microscale synthetic methods, molecular modeling via
IBM-PC and qualitative organic analysis. Prerequisites: CHM 211, 213.
Corequisite: CHM 212. Offered spring.
CHM 305. ENVIRONMENTAL CHEMISTRY 4 sh
Environmental Chemistry provides a survey of chemical topics applying
to selected pollutants in the air, water and soil. Such topics include
production and diffusion, photochemical processes, techniques for analysis,
acid-base and redox chemistry, environmental and biological effects. Laboratory
work includes acid/base and buffer chemistry, analysis of heavy metal
pollutants sampling techniques, and resistance of selected materials to
certain pollutants. No credit toward B.S. degree. Prerequisites: CHM 211/213.
Offered spring of alternate years.
CHM 311. QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS 4 sh
This course introduces chemical methods of quantitative analysis, including
classical volumetric and selected instrumental methods, a discussion of
error and uncertainty in measurements, and elementary statistics. Discussion
also covers the underlying physical and chemical theories and laws, with
emphasis on chemical equilibrium. Prerequisites: CHM 111, 112, 113, 114.
Offered fall.
CHM 321. INSTRUMENTAL ANALYSIS 4sh
Instrumental Analysis offers theory and practice of instrumental methods,
with emphasis placed on spectroscopic (UV/Vis, IR, NMR, AA), mass spectrometric
and radiochemical methods of analysis. Prerequisites: CHM 311, and CHM
211, 212, 213, 214. Offered spring.
CHM 332. PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY I 4 sh
The mathematical development of the physical principles in chemistry is
explored. Topics include development and application of the laws of thermodynamics,
equations of states, kinetic molecular theory, elementary electrochemistry
and equilibria. Laboratory experiments are designed to complement lectures
and include studies of phase relationships, calorimetry and gas laws.Three
hours lecture and three hours lab per week. Prerequisites: CHM 111-114
or CHM 115, 116; MTH 121; PHY 112 or 114. Offered fall.
CHM 334. PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY II 4 sh
The principles of quantum mechanics are developed and illustrated by use
of simple systems. Spectroscopic techniques are investigated as tools
for probing structure and properties of molecules. Other topics include
kinetics and group theory. Laboratory experiments are designed to complement
lectures and include multiple techniques to investigate reaction kinetics,
laser spectroscopy, UV-VIS spectroscopy and computational techniques.Three
hours lecture and three hours lab per week. Prerequisites: CHM 332, MTH
221, PHY 114. Offered spring.
CHM 351. BIOCHEMISTRY 3 sh
This is a survey of biochemistry as it relates to the physiology of organisms.Topics
include biochemical methodology, buffers, proteins (structure, function
and synthesis), enzymes, bioenergetics, anabolism and catabolism of carbohydrates
and lipids and metabolic regulation. Prerequisites: CHM 211, 212, 213,
214. (CHM 351 is the same as BIO 351.) Offered fall.
CHM 352. BIOCHEMISTRY LABORATORY 1 sh
This laboratory investigates the rates of enzyme-catalyzed reactions,
including the effect of enzyme inhibitors; the isolation/purification/analysis
of proteins, lipids and carbohydrates; and some analytical techniques
used in clinical chemistry laboratories. Techniques employed include affinity
chromatography, electrophoresis, gas chromatography, UV-visible spectrometry
and polarimetry. Prerequisites: CHM 211, 212, 213, 214. Corequisite: CHM
351. (CHM 352 is the same as BIO 352.) Offered fall.
CHM 431. ADVANCED INORGANIC CHEMISTRY 4 sh
This course will begin with an accelerated review of the history of inorganic
chemistry, atomic structure and simple bond theory. It will then provide
an in-depth introduction into symmetry and group theory with applications
to the description of chemical bonding in molecular orbital theory. Acid-Base
and Donor-Acceptor Chemistry and the descriptive chemistry of the main
group elements will be followed by an in-depth survey of organometallic
chemistry.The continued application of physical methods of structure determination
of inorganic compounds by magnetic and spectral techniques including magnetic
susceptibility, UV/VIS and IR spectroscopies and NMR spectrometry will
be presented throughout the course. Prerequisite: CHM 205 and CHM 334.
Offered fall.
CHM 432. PHYSICAL ORGANIC CHEMISTRY 2 sh
The study and applications of Hückel molecular orbital theory
toward the understanding of the mechanisms of selected chemical reactions.
The focus will be on empirical methods to derive mechanisms including
linear free energy relationships and reaction kinetics. Techniques to
be covered include photoelecton spectroscopy (PES) and computational chemistry
(CC). Prerequisite: CHM 334.
CHM 461. SEMINAR 1 sh
Students make presentations after they do individual library research.
Student seminars are supplemented with seminars by practicing scientists.
All chemistry-oriented students are encouraged to attend. Credit for junior
and senior majors only or by permission of the instructor. Course is two
semesters in length with 0.5 sh each semester. Students must take both
semesters. Offered fall and spring.
CHM 471-479. SPECIAL TOPICS IN CHEMISTRY 2-4 sh
Advanced topics offered to meet the needs and interests of students include
methods in nuclear chemistry, nuclear magnetic resonance, advanced organic
or polymer chemistry. Prerequisites: CHM 212/214.
CHM 481. INTERNSHIP 1-4 sh
Students gain advanced level work experience in a chemical field. Internships
are offered on an individual basis when suitable opportunities can be
arranged. Prerequisite: permission of department.
CHM 491. INDEPENDENT STUDIES 1-4 sh
CHM 499. RESEARCH 1-3 sh
In collaboration with a chemistry faculty member, students undertake experimental
or theoretical investigations. Prerequisite: Approval of department chair.
Offered fall, winter, spring. |
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