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Professor: McDonald
Associate Professor: Bendorf (Chairperson)
Assistant Professor: Mahler, Ramsey
Part-time Assistant Professor: Berkheimer
The Department of Chemistry offers both B.A. and B.S. degree programs, and
is approved by the American Chemical Society (ACS) to certify those students
whose programs meet or exceed requirements established by the ACS. Students who wish
to earn ACS certification must complete the requirements for the B.S. degree.
Students who complete the ACS certified degree are also eligible for admission to the
American Chemical Society following graduation.
For students planning on graduate study in chemistry, German is the preferred
foreign language option, and additional courses in
advanced mathematics and computer science
are also recommended.
The following courses, when scheduled as W courses, count toward the writing
intensive requirement: CHEM 330, 331, and 332.
The B.A. degree
To earn the B.A. degree a student must complete CHEM 110-111, 220-221,
330-331, 332, 333; PHYS 225-226; MATH 128-129; and, as a Capstone experience, one of
the following: CHEM 449, 470, 490 or the Professional Semester (EDUC 446,
447, 449).
The B.S. degree
To earn the B.S. degree a student must complete the thirteen course major
described above as well as CHEM 443, CHEM 444, and one additional full-credit course from
the following list: any 400-level CHEM course; PHYS 331 or above; BIO 222 or
above; MATH 123, 130, 214, 216, 231, 238, 332; or CPTR 125.
Certification in Secondary Education
A Chemistry major interested in becoming certified in secondary education in
Chemistry and/or General Science/Chemistry should,
as early as possible, consult the current Department of Education Teacher Education
Handbook and make their plans known to their advisor and the Chair of the
Education
Department so the required courses can
be scheduled for the Professional Semester. A Chemistry major who successfully
completes the Professional Semester (EDUC 446,
447, 449) has also satisfied the Chemistry
Capstone experience.
a) To be certified in secondary education
in chemistry a student must: complete
a chemistry major; pass two biology
courses numbered 110 or higher,
Psy 110 and 138, EduC 200, 338 and 339; complete the Pre-Student
Teach- ing Participation and pass the Profes-
sional Semester (EduC 446, 447,
449). The student may choose EduC 232 as an additional Education
elective.
b) A student interested in obtaining
General Science/Chemistry certifica-
tion must complete all the require-
ments for secondary certification in
chemistry shown in (a) and must also
pass any two units from AstR 111,
112 or 243. AstR 230 is strongly
recommended as an additional course.
Minor
A minor in chemistry requires completion of CHEM 110-111, 220-221, and two
CHEM courses numbered 300 or higher.
100
CHEMISTRY IN CONTEXT
A science distribution course for the non-science major. The course will explore
real-world societal issues that have important chemical components. Topics covered
may include air and water quality, the ozone
layer, global warming, energy, acid rain, nuclear power, pharmaceuticals and nutrition.
The chemistry knowledge associated with the issues is built on a need-to-know basis.
Three hours of lecture and one two-hour
laboratory period each week. Not open for credit to
stu- dents who have received credit for CHEM 110.
110
GENERAL CHEMISTRY I
A quantitative introduction to the
concepts and models of chemistry. Topics include stoichiometry, atomic and molecular
structure, nomenclature, bonding, thermochemistry, gases, solutions, and chemical reactions.
The laboratory introduces the student to methods
of separation, purification, and identification of compounds according to their
physical properties. This course is designed for students who plan to major in one of
the sciences. Three hours lecture, one hour of discussion and one three-hour
laboratory period each week. Prerequisite: MATH
100 or consent of department.
111
GENERAL CHEMISTRY II
A continuation of CHEM 110, with emphasis placed on the foundations of analytical,
inorganic, and physical chemistry. Topics include kinetics,
general and ionic equilibria, acid-base theory, electrochemistry,
thermodynamics, nuclear chemistry, coordination chemistry,
and descriptive inorganic chemistry of selected elements. The laboratory treats aspects
of quantitative and qualitative inorganic analysis.
Three hours of lecture, one hour of discussion, and one three-hour laboratory
period each week. Prerequisite: CHEM 110 or consent of
department.
115
BRIEF ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
A descriptive study of the compounds of carbon. This course will illustrate the
principles of organic chemistry with material relevant to students in medical
technology, biology, forestry, education and the
humanities. Topics include nomenclature, alkanes, arenes, functional derivatives, amino
acids and proteins, carbohydrates and other naturally occurring compounds. This course
is designed for students who require only one semester of organic chemistry, and is
not intended for students planning to enroll in chemistry courses numbered 200 or
above. Three hours of lecture, one hour of
discussion, and one three-hour laboratory period
each week. Prerequisite: CHEM 111. Not open for credit to students who have received credit
for CHEM 220.
220-221
ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
A systematic study of the compounds of carbon, including both aliphatic and
aromatic series. The laboratory work introduces
the student to simple fundamental methods of organic synthesis, isolation, and analysis.
Three hours of lecture and one four-hour laboratory period each week. Prerequisite
for CHEM 220: CHEM 111. Prerequisite for CHEM 221: A grade of C- or better in
CHEM 220.
330-331
PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY
A study of energy, time and structure in chemistry and its reactions, including
in-depth gas laws, thermodynamics, phases, equilibrium, electrochemistry, kinetics,
quantum mechanics and statistical mechanics. The laboratory work includes techniques
in physiochemical measurements. Three hours of lecture and one four-hour
laboratory period each week. Prerequisites: CHEM
111, MATH 129, PHYS 225-226; or consent of instructor.
332
ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
A study of the fundamental methods of gravimetric, volumetric and
elementary instrumental analysis together with practice
in lab-oratory techniques and calculations of
these methods. Two hours of lecture and two
three-hour laboratory periods each week. Prerequisite: CHEM 111 or consent of instructor.
333
ADVANCED INORGANIC CHEMISTRY
A study of modern theories of atomic and molecular structure and their relationship to
the
chemistry of selected elements and
their compounds. Three hours of lecture and
one four-hour laboratory period each week. Pre-requisites: CHEM 330, MATH 129,
and one year of physics; or consent of instructor.
439
INTRODUCTION TO QUANTUM
MECHANICS
Introduction to the basic concepts and principles of quantum theory. Solutions to
the free particle, the simple harmonic oscillator, the hydrogen atom, and other central
force problems are presented using the Schrodinger wave equation approach. Topics also
include operator formalism, eigenstates,
eigenvalues, the uncertainty principles, stationary
states, representation of wave functions by
eigenstate expansions, and the Heisenberg matrix approach.
Four hours of lecture. Prerequisites: Either PHYS 226 or CHEM 331,
and MATH 231. Cross-listed as PHYS 439.
440
ADVANCED ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
Theory and application of modern synthetic organic chemistry. Topics may
include oxidation-reduction processes,
carbon-carbon bond forming reactions, functional
group transformations, and multi-step syntheses of natural products
(antibiotics, antitumor agents, and antiviral agents).
Three hours of lecture and one four-hour laboratory period.
Prerequisite: CHEM 221.
442
SPECTROSCOPY AND
MOLECULAR STRUCTURE
Theory and application of the identification
of organic compounds. Special emphasis will be placed on the utilization of
spectroscopic techniques (H-NMR, C-NMR, IR,
UV-VIS, and MS). Three of hours lecture and one
four-hour laboratory period each week. Prerequisite:
CHEM 221.
443
ADVANCED ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
A study of advanced analytical methods with emphasis on chromatographic,
electrochemical, and spectroscopic methods of instrumental analysis.
Three hours lecture and one four-hour laboratory period
each week. Prerequisites: CHEM 331 and 332, or consent of instructor.
444
BIOCHEMISTRY
Emphasis is given to the metabolism of carbohydrates, lipids, amino acids,
proteins, and nucleic acids; integration of
metabolism; and biochemical control mechanisms,
including allosteric control, induction,
repression, signal transduction as well as the various
types of inhibitive control mechanisms. Three hours of lecture, one three-hour
laboratory and one hour of arranged work per week.
Prerequisite: CHEM 221, or consent of instructor. Cross-listed as BIO
444.
446
ORGANOMETALLIC CHEMISTRY
An introduction to the chemistry of compounds containing metal-carbon bonds.
Topics include structure and bonding, reactions and mechanisms, spectroscopy,
and applications to organic synthesis. The use of organometallic compounds as catalysts
in industrial processes will be emphasized.
Three hours of lecture and one four-hour
laboratory period each week. Prerequisite: CHEM 221.
447
POLYMER CHEMISTRY
An introduction to the synthesis, characterization, and applications of high
molecular weight materials, i.e., macro-molecules.
Special emphasis will be given to synthetic polymer systems.
Three hours of lecture, one four-hour lab per week. Prerequisites:
CHEM 221 and 330, or consent of instructor.
348 & 448
CHEMISTRY COLLOQUIUM
A seminar in which faculty, students and invited professional chemists discuss their
own
research activities or those of others
which have appeared in recent chemical literature.
Prerequisite: Three semesters of non-credit Chemistry Colloquium taken during the
junior and senior years.
449
CHEMISTRY RESEARCH METHODS
This course focuses on the nature and practice of chemistry. Students will
conduct research into a particular chemical
problem with a faculty research advisor, and will explore different aspects of chemistry
and discuss their research in a weekly seminar. A report on the research will be written.
Majors are strongly encouraged to enroll in this
course in either their junior or senior year. Eight
to ten hours of laboratory work and one hour seminar each
week. Prerequisites: CHEM 221 and consent of instructor; Corequisite:
CHEM 330.
470-479
INTERNSHIP (See index)
The student will ordinarily work under supervision in an industrial laboratory
and submit a written report on the project. To satisfy the Chemistry Capstone
requirement, participation in the seminar portion of
CHEM 449 is required.
N80-N89
INDEPENDENT STUDY (See index)
The student will ordinarily work on a laboratory research project and will write
a thesis on the work.
490-491
INDEPENDENT STUDY FOR
DEPARTMENTAL HONORS (See index)
The student will ordinarily work on a laboratory research project with emphasis
on showing initiative and making a scholarly contribution. A thesis will be written.
To satisfy the Chemistry Capstone requirement, participation in the seminar portion of
CHEM 449 is required.
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