Page 386 |
Previous | 386 of 536 | Next |
|
|
This page
All
|
Chemistry 386 2006-2007 California State University, Fresno General Catalog COURSES Chemistry (CHEM) CHEM 1A. General Chemistry 1A (5) Prerequisites: high school chemistry; G.E. Foundation B4 (except for students with declared majors in the College of Science and Mathematics). CHEM 1A not open to stu-dents with credit in CHEM 1B. Fundamen-tal principles of chemistry such as chemical bonding and structure; stoichiometry, ther-mochemistry, oxidation-reductions, and states of matter. G.E. Breadth B1. (3 lecture, 3 lab, and 2 activity hours)* (CAN CHEM 2) CHEM 1B. General Chemistry 1B (5) Prerequisite: CHEM 1A with a grade of C or better. Acid-base theory; chemical kinet-ics; equilibrium (acid-base, hydrolysis, and solubility); thermodynamics, electrochem-istry; selected topics in nuclear chemistry, coordination chemistry, and/or chemistry of selected groups. (3 lecture, 6 lab hours)* (CAN CHEM 4) CHEM 3A. Introductory General Chemistry (4) Prerequisite: G.E. Foundation B4 (except for students with declared majors in the College of Science and Mathematics). No credit for CHEM 3A after 1A. High school chemistry or CHEM 15R recommended. For applied science and nonscience majors. Composition of matter and physical and chemical changes; fundamental laws and principles; atomic and molecular structure; acid-base theory, redox and equilibria; quali-tative and quantitative theory and tech-niques. G.E. Breadth B1. (3 lecture, 3 lab hours)* CHEM 3B. Introductory Organic and Biochemistry (3) No credit for CHEM 3B to students with credit in 1B. Primarily for students in health-oriented professions; not a substitute for CHEM 8. Prerequisite: CHEM 3A. Intro-duction to the basic concepts of organic and biochemistry. Structure and behavior of or-ganic and biological compounds, metabo-lism, and regulation. CHEM 8. Elementary Organic Chemistry (3) Not open to chemistry majors. Recom-mended for students requiring a one-semes-ter course in the field. Prerequisite: CHEM 1A or 3A. Lectures, discussions, and dem-onstrations of fundamental principles; struc-ture and chemical behavior of organic com-pounds. CHEM 10. Chemistry and Society (4) Not open to students with credit in college chemistry; for nonscience majors. Prerequi-site: G.E. Foundation B4 (except for stu-dents with declared majors in the College of Science and Mathematics). The significance of chemical principles in contemporary so-ciety; benefits and hazards relative to areas such as energy, health, diet, environment, and agriculture. G.E. Breadth B1. (3 lec-ture, 2 lab hours)* CHEM 15R. Preparation for Chemistry (2) Prerequisite: one year of high school alge-bra. Recommended for students without high school chemistry who are interested in taking additional chemistry or science courses. Basic principles and concepts of chemistry with an emphasis on problem solving. Preparation for CHEM 1A and CHEM 3A. CR/NC grading only. Not ap-plicable to baccalaureate degree require-ments. (Formerly CHEM AR) CHEM 102. Quantitative Analytical Chemistry (5) For chemistry majors; recommended for other science majors. Prerequisites: CHEM 1B (with a grade of C or better) and 128A. Students with credit in a similar lower-division quantitative analysis course will re-ceive only one additional unit of credit. Introduction to principles and methods of analytical chemistry. (3 lecture, 6 lab hours)* CHEM 105. Quantitative Analysis Laboratory (4) Not open to chemistry majors. Prerequi-sites: CHEM 1A (with a grade of C or better), or CHEM 3A (with a grade of B or better), or permission of instructor. Labora-tory study of principles and methods of applied quantitative analysis. (2 lecture, 6 lab hours)* CHEM 106. Analytical Measurements Laboratory (4) Prerequisites: CHEM 102 (with a grade of C or better), 108 or 110A, or permission of instructor. Principles and methods of ana-lytical measurements of organic and inor-ganic substances by instrumental and non-instrumental techniques. (2 lecture, 6 lab hours) (Fall semester)* CHEM 108. Introductory Physical Chemistry (4) Prerequisites: MATH 76 (MATH 77 strongly recommended), CHEM 8 or 128A, and PHYS 2A and 2B or 4A, 4AL, 4B, 4BL, and 4C. Basic treatment of gas laws, ther-modynamics, phase equilibria, properties of solutions, kinetics, and spectroscopy. (Fall semester) CHEM 109. Elementary Organic Chemistry Laboratory (3) Not open to chemistry majors. Prerequisite: CHEM 8 or 128B or concurrently. Labora-tory study of the carbon compounds with coordinating lectures. (1 lecture, 6 lab hours)* (Spring semester) CHEM 110A-B. Physical Chemistry (3-3) Prerequisites: MATH 77; CHEM 1B, 8 or 128A; CHEM 110A requires PHYS 4B; CHEM 110B requires PHYS 4C or permis-sion of instructor. Mathematical treatment of the laws of thermodynamics, reaction kinetics, elementary statistical and quantum mechanics, properties of solutions, kinetic theory of gases, crystal structure, molecular structure, and nuclear chemistry. (CHEM 110A fall semester; CHEM 110B spring semester) CHEM 111. Physical Chemistry Laboratory (3) Prerequisite: CHEM 110B or concurrently, CHEM 102. May not be taken concur-rently with 106. Techniques of physical measurements, error analysis and statistics; ultra-violet, infrared, and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy; dipole moments, viscosity, calorimetry, kinetics, phase dia-grams, thermodynamic measurements, and report writing. (1 lecture, 6 lab hours) (Spring semester)* CHEM 123. Advanced Inorganic Chemistry (3) Prerequisites: CHEM 1B, 102 and 110A (or concurrently). Treatment of ionic and co-valent bonding, atomic structure, molecular structure, and reaction mechanisms. Intro-duction to visible and infrared spectroscopy of transition metal complexes, special top-ics. (Fall semester) CHEM 124. Synthesis and Characterization (2) Prerequisite: CHEM 123 or concurrently. Techniques of preparation to include high temperature reactions, vacuum line and glove box preps, nonaqueous syntheses, solid state reactions. Emphasis on structural character-izations using instrumental methods. (6 lab hours) (Spring semester)* * In all lab courses, the wearing of approved safety glasses is mandatory.
Object Description
Title | 2006-07 General Catalog |
Creator | California State University, Fresno |
Format | PDF Document |
Date of publication | 2006-05 |
Subjects | California State University, Fresno. Curricula. Catalogs |
Object type | Document |
Location | Fresno, California |
Language | eng |
Description
Title | Page 386 |
Full Text Search | Chemistry 386 2006-2007 California State University, Fresno General Catalog COURSES Chemistry (CHEM) CHEM 1A. General Chemistry 1A (5) Prerequisites: high school chemistry; G.E. Foundation B4 (except for students with declared majors in the College of Science and Mathematics). CHEM 1A not open to stu-dents with credit in CHEM 1B. Fundamen-tal principles of chemistry such as chemical bonding and structure; stoichiometry, ther-mochemistry, oxidation-reductions, and states of matter. G.E. Breadth B1. (3 lecture, 3 lab, and 2 activity hours)* (CAN CHEM 2) CHEM 1B. General Chemistry 1B (5) Prerequisite: CHEM 1A with a grade of C or better. Acid-base theory; chemical kinet-ics; equilibrium (acid-base, hydrolysis, and solubility); thermodynamics, electrochem-istry; selected topics in nuclear chemistry, coordination chemistry, and/or chemistry of selected groups. (3 lecture, 6 lab hours)* (CAN CHEM 4) CHEM 3A. Introductory General Chemistry (4) Prerequisite: G.E. Foundation B4 (except for students with declared majors in the College of Science and Mathematics). No credit for CHEM 3A after 1A. High school chemistry or CHEM 15R recommended. For applied science and nonscience majors. Composition of matter and physical and chemical changes; fundamental laws and principles; atomic and molecular structure; acid-base theory, redox and equilibria; quali-tative and quantitative theory and tech-niques. G.E. Breadth B1. (3 lecture, 3 lab hours)* CHEM 3B. Introductory Organic and Biochemistry (3) No credit for CHEM 3B to students with credit in 1B. Primarily for students in health-oriented professions; not a substitute for CHEM 8. Prerequisite: CHEM 3A. Intro-duction to the basic concepts of organic and biochemistry. Structure and behavior of or-ganic and biological compounds, metabo-lism, and regulation. CHEM 8. Elementary Organic Chemistry (3) Not open to chemistry majors. Recom-mended for students requiring a one-semes-ter course in the field. Prerequisite: CHEM 1A or 3A. Lectures, discussions, and dem-onstrations of fundamental principles; struc-ture and chemical behavior of organic com-pounds. CHEM 10. Chemistry and Society (4) Not open to students with credit in college chemistry; for nonscience majors. Prerequi-site: G.E. Foundation B4 (except for stu-dents with declared majors in the College of Science and Mathematics). The significance of chemical principles in contemporary so-ciety; benefits and hazards relative to areas such as energy, health, diet, environment, and agriculture. G.E. Breadth B1. (3 lec-ture, 2 lab hours)* CHEM 15R. Preparation for Chemistry (2) Prerequisite: one year of high school alge-bra. Recommended for students without high school chemistry who are interested in taking additional chemistry or science courses. Basic principles and concepts of chemistry with an emphasis on problem solving. Preparation for CHEM 1A and CHEM 3A. CR/NC grading only. Not ap-plicable to baccalaureate degree require-ments. (Formerly CHEM AR) CHEM 102. Quantitative Analytical Chemistry (5) For chemistry majors; recommended for other science majors. Prerequisites: CHEM 1B (with a grade of C or better) and 128A. Students with credit in a similar lower-division quantitative analysis course will re-ceive only one additional unit of credit. Introduction to principles and methods of analytical chemistry. (3 lecture, 6 lab hours)* CHEM 105. Quantitative Analysis Laboratory (4) Not open to chemistry majors. Prerequi-sites: CHEM 1A (with a grade of C or better), or CHEM 3A (with a grade of B or better), or permission of instructor. Labora-tory study of principles and methods of applied quantitative analysis. (2 lecture, 6 lab hours)* CHEM 106. Analytical Measurements Laboratory (4) Prerequisites: CHEM 102 (with a grade of C or better), 108 or 110A, or permission of instructor. Principles and methods of ana-lytical measurements of organic and inor-ganic substances by instrumental and non-instrumental techniques. (2 lecture, 6 lab hours) (Fall semester)* CHEM 108. Introductory Physical Chemistry (4) Prerequisites: MATH 76 (MATH 77 strongly recommended), CHEM 8 or 128A, and PHYS 2A and 2B or 4A, 4AL, 4B, 4BL, and 4C. Basic treatment of gas laws, ther-modynamics, phase equilibria, properties of solutions, kinetics, and spectroscopy. (Fall semester) CHEM 109. Elementary Organic Chemistry Laboratory (3) Not open to chemistry majors. Prerequisite: CHEM 8 or 128B or concurrently. Labora-tory study of the carbon compounds with coordinating lectures. (1 lecture, 6 lab hours)* (Spring semester) CHEM 110A-B. Physical Chemistry (3-3) Prerequisites: MATH 77; CHEM 1B, 8 or 128A; CHEM 110A requires PHYS 4B; CHEM 110B requires PHYS 4C or permis-sion of instructor. Mathematical treatment of the laws of thermodynamics, reaction kinetics, elementary statistical and quantum mechanics, properties of solutions, kinetic theory of gases, crystal structure, molecular structure, and nuclear chemistry. (CHEM 110A fall semester; CHEM 110B spring semester) CHEM 111. Physical Chemistry Laboratory (3) Prerequisite: CHEM 110B or concurrently, CHEM 102. May not be taken concur-rently with 106. Techniques of physical measurements, error analysis and statistics; ultra-violet, infrared, and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy; dipole moments, viscosity, calorimetry, kinetics, phase dia-grams, thermodynamic measurements, and report writing. (1 lecture, 6 lab hours) (Spring semester)* CHEM 123. Advanced Inorganic Chemistry (3) Prerequisites: CHEM 1B, 102 and 110A (or concurrently). Treatment of ionic and co-valent bonding, atomic structure, molecular structure, and reaction mechanisms. Intro-duction to visible and infrared spectroscopy of transition metal complexes, special top-ics. (Fall semester) CHEM 124. Synthesis and Characterization (2) Prerequisite: CHEM 123 or concurrently. Techniques of preparation to include high temperature reactions, vacuum line and glove box preps, nonaqueous syntheses, solid state reactions. Emphasis on structural character-izations using instrumental methods. (6 lab hours) (Spring semester)* * In all lab courses, the wearing of approved safety glasses is mandatory. |