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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Topics studied include descriptive chemistry of the elements, coordination compounds, electrochemistry and basic principles of gravimetric, volumetric, complexometric, spectrophotometric, potentiometric, and chromatographic analysis. Laboratory work is required. Prerequisite: CHE 132 or 135.
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3.00 Credits
An examination of the chemical principles and reactions that govern the behavior of both natural environmental systems and anthropogenic compounds important in the environment. Prerequisite: CHE 132 and CHE 241.
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4.00 Credits
A study of the chemistry of inorganic compounds, including the principles of covalent and ionic bonding, symmetry, periodic properties, metallic bonding, acid-base theories, coordination chemistry, inorganic reaction mechanisms, and selected topics in descriptive inorganic chemistry. Laboratory work is required. Prerequisite: CHE 341 and CHE 361.
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4.00 Credits
A continuation of CHE 241, with emphasis on the chemistry of aromatic and carbonyl compounds. Polymer chemistry and the chemistry of biological molecules are also introduced. More complex synthetic methods and the use of the chemical literature are studied. Laboratory work is required. Prerequisite: CHE 241.
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4.00 Credits
An introduction to the principles and applications of the major instrumental analysis techniques. Topics include UV-Vis, IR, Raman, fluorescence, atomic absorption and emission, gas and liquid chromatography, NMR, electroanalytical techniques, mass spectrometry, and radiochemistry. Laboratory work is required. Prerequisite: CHE 250 and 361.
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4.00 Credits
A study of chemical thermodynamics and kinetics. Topics include the laws of thermodynamics, thermochemistry, phase behavior, the thermodynamics of ideal and real solutions, rate laws, reaction rate theory, factors affecting reaction rates, and catalysis. Prerequisite: CHE 132, MAT 171, and PHY 110 or 210. Laboratory work is required. (Also listed as CHP 361.)
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4.00 Credits
A study of quantum mechanics, molecular spectroscopy, and statistical mechanics. Topics include the the Sch dinger equation and its application to melecular systems, molecular orbital theory and its chemical ramifications, the development of the partition function, the Boltzman distribution law, and the significance of statistical behavior in molecular systems. Prerequisite: CHE 132, MAT 171, and 230 (PHY 230 may be taken concurrently with CHE 362). Laboratory work is required. (Also listed as CHP 362.)
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3.00 Credits
A study of the role of inorganic compounds in living species. Natural processes that require metal ions, including respiration, metabolism, photosynthesis, gene regulation, and nerve impulse transmission are discussed. The role of unnatural metals introduced to the body as diagnostic probes or drugs are also studied. The course format includes readings from the primary literature, as well as formal written and oral presentations by the students. Prerequisite: CHE 241.
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4.00 Credits
A study of relativity, atomic and molecular structure, physics of the solid state, nuclear structure, quark theory, and associated phenomena. Laboratory work is required. Prerequisite: PHY 230, MAT 230 and 360, or permission of the instructor. CHP 310 is a prerequisite for CHP 320. (Also listed as PHY 310, 320.)
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4.00 Credits
A study of chemical thermodynamics and kinetics. Topics include the laws of thermodynamics, thermochemistry, phase behavior, the thermodynamics of ideal and real solutions, rate laws, reaction rate theory, factors affecting reaction rates, and catalysis. Prerequisite: CHE 132, MAT 171, and PHY 110 or 210. Laboratory work is required. (Also listed as CHE 361.)
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