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Course Criteria
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4.00 Credits
A comprehensive overview of the chemistry of water with accent on aqueous environmental problems that include cost, increased energy consumption, national sacrifices, and the benefits of environmental quality. Three hours of lecture and four hours of lab per week. Prerequisites: CHEM 0101 or CHEM 0106 and CHEM 0107
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4.00 Credits
Designed to provide biology and chemistry students with an exposure to the chemistry of vitamins, hormones, beta-blockers, central nervous system (CNS) stimulants, antidepression drugs, etc. Focus on synthetic methodology. Three hours of lecture and four hours of lab per week. Prerequisite: CHEM 0208 and 0209 (C or better) or BIOL 0102
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4.00 Credits
A continuation of biochemistry (CHEM 1306) with emphasis on peptide, nucleotide synthetic methodology. Further treatment of metabolic processes with oxidative phosphorylation. Laboratory focuses on basic research techniques such as electrophoresis, gel permeation, chromatography, and enzyme kinetics. Three hours of lecture and four hours of lab per week. Prerequisite: CHEM 1306
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3.00 Credits
This course will cover the basic principles of wood chemistry and its potential to pulp, paper-making, wood technology, wood waste processing, pulping by-products, bio-mass conversion, cellulose, lignin, wood extracts, etc. Prerequisites: Chemistry 0101 (or equivalent course which has a college chemistry laboratory component).
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4.00 Credits
The effects of structure and bonding on chemical properties and the application of periodic relationships to selected families of elements. The laboratory will reinforce topics presented in lecture such as synthesis, stereochemistry, and spectroscopy of inorganic compounds. Three hours of lecture and four hours of lab per week. Prerequisite: CHEM 1301 Corequisite: CHEM 1302
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3.00 Credits
First, second, and third laws of thermodynamics applied to chemical systems. Topics include heat capacities, entropy, free energy, chemical potential, equilibrium calculations, solutions, gases, surface effects, activity coefficients, estimation of entropies, and other thermodynamic quantities. Prerequisite: CHEM 1302
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3.00 Credits
Properties accessible by computation that are of experimental accuracy include heats of formation, reaction surfaces (pathways), electron density, intermediates, isotope effects, transition states, reactivity, polarization, normal vibrations, structure, stability, ionization potential, dipole moment, moments of inertia, steric energy, and rotational barriers. Prerequisite: CHEM 0208 and 0209 (with grade of C or better) Corequisite: CHEM 1301
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3.00 Credits
An introduction to molecular informatics with emphasis on receptor/ligand interactions. Secondary structures, homology modeling, electrostatics, energetics, rotomer evaluation, electronic databases, etc. will be introduced and utilized throughout the course.
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4.00 Credits
A yearlong project supervised by a member of the chemistry faculty. Two credits the first semester and two credits the second. The first semester will consist of class meetings to introduce students to searching the chemical literature, gathering of references relating to the student’s project, and conducting any laboratory work necessary to the completion of the project. The second semester will be spent writing and editing an extensive paper using acs format and conducting an oral presentation of the research. GE Capstone, Upper Level Writing
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1.00 - 3.00 Credits
The advanced study of a special topic in chemistry. Prerequisite: permission of instructor
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