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Topics in inorganic chemistry, including periodicity and descriptive chemistry of the elements, electrochemistry, transition metal coordination chemistry, and the structure and properties of solid state materials. Laboratories emphasize synthesis and characterization of inorganic coordination compounds, electrochemistry, and inorganic materials. This course satisfies the second semester of a one-year General Chemistry requirement for post-graduate Health Professions programs. Prerequisite, 120 or 125. Three hours of lecture and three hours of laboratory.
Students will
(1) understand the breadth of inroganic chemistry through descriptive chemistry of the elements and periodic trrends
(2) be able to describe the basics of nuclear processes and the origin of the elements
(3) be able to explain the fundmentals of electrochemistry and its applications through Frost, Ellingham, and Pourbaix diagrams along with the properties of batteries
(4) be able to relate the the structure and bonding, of transition element coordination compunds to their reactivity and applications
(5) be able to describe the general properties and coordination chemistry of the lanthanoids and actinoids
(6) understand the bonding and solid state structures of metals and ionic compounds
(7) be aware of the ways in which materials are chemaracterized (diffraction, DSC, TGA, light-scattering, etc.)
(8) understand the mechanism of semiconducting materials and photonic materials
(9) be able to decribe the structure of carbon materials and inorganic polymers
(10) be able to explain how inorganic materials are used to store data (magnetic and optic)
(11) describe the structure and properties of nanomaterials along with their potential applications