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After introducing my Gen Chem students to the Quantum Mechanical Model of the Atom today and waiting...waiting for that lovely question..."but how does an electron get from one side of the p orbital to the other?", I decided this might be my favorite lecture of the semester.
Which got me to thinking...what is my favorite lecture of Inorganic Chemistry? I think it is a close tie between the MO diagram of CH4 and connecting it to the photoelectron spectrum or (since that is boring old carbon), explaining the spectrochemical series and effects of π-donors and π-acceptors with MO diagrams of octahedral complexes.
What's your favorite lecture in Inorganic Chemistry?
In reply to Favorite lecture by Nancy Williams / Scripps College, Pitzer College, Claremont McKenna College
I have 2 favorite lectures, well, 3. Werner, nitrogenase, and my "Nobel prizes in electron transfer through the ages." where I summarize Arrhenius, Werner, Marcus and Taube in one lecture. whew, that one is fun.
But, my Werner lecture is my favorite. I go through a historical perspective, with Werner and Jørgensen battling it out over chain theory vs. what would eventually be called Werner theory. Isomer counting, synthetic methods, chirality, all that great stuff. I present data and students rule out what can't be true, and at the end, hey, they must be octahedral! At the end, I say, he was skilled, but lucky. Try this with Cr(II) or Co(II).
I also do a historical perspective when I discuss Haber and ammonia, with the added fun of discussing bat guano in lecture. I usually try to discuss the implications of NH3 on the length of WWI, and I end this depressing tale with the suicide of his first wife in opposition of his work with chemical weapons. I don't try to get preachy here, just illustrate the science and society are not separate things.
My ET tour-de-force discusses the following chemical reaction through the ages:
Cr(III) + Co(II) --> Cr(II) + Co(III)
and we include inner/outer sphere ET, Werners description of the complexes (Cr(III) contains a chloride that bridges and Co(III) has the Cl at the end), Marcus theory of ET rates, and the Creutz-Taube ion.
These 3 lectures are really more about me having fun and showing historical perspectives rather than expecting them to know it all. They serve as introductory lectures for the rest of the unit that I can then refer back to from time to time.
Adam
In reply to Werner by Adam Johnson / Harvey Mudd College
In reply to Favorite lecture by Nancy Williams / Scripps College, Pitzer College, Claremont McKenna College