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Columbia CHEM UN1403 - CHEM UN1403 Lecture Notes

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PowerPoint PresentationSlide 2Slide 3Slide 4Slide 5Slide 6Slide 7Slide 8Slide 9Slide 10Slide 11Slide 12Slide 13Slide 141General Chemistry C1403x, Fall 2005M/W 1:10-2:25 PMInstructor: Professor Nicholas J. TurroOffice 768 ChandlerEmail: [email protected]: 212 854 2175 or 212 854 3017All of this information is on the course home page in courseworks: https://courseworks.columbia.edu/2Chemistry C1403_2005. Recitation section schedule.Monday Tuesday Wednesday Friday10-10:50 AM (023) Marissa Solomon307 Pupin________________________________________________________________________________________11-11:50 AM (024) Marissa Solomon307 Pupin________________________________________________________________________________________1:10-2 PM (022) Jeremiah Johnson501 B International Affairs________________________________________________________________________________________ 3:10-4 PM (019) Marissa Solomon424 Pupin (021) Jeremiah Johnson424 Pupin________________________________________________________________________________________ 4:10-5 PM (020) Jeremiah Johnson412 Pupin______________________________________________________________________________________Ms. Marissa Solomon ([email protected])Mr. Jeremiah Johnson ([email protected])3YOU MUST BE REGISTERED for one of the six recitation sections for this course. The purpose of the recitation section is for you to go over homework problems, ask questions, take quizzes, meet other students, organize study groups, prepare for the exams.If you are not registered for one of these sections, you are not registered for this course and you will not receive a grade. Please see your TA if you are not registered for one of the listed recitation sections.Diagnostic exam this week. Recitations next week.This standardized national examination will not be used in computing the term grade. However, an exceptional score might decide a borderline computation in your favor. If you have not taken the diagnostic exam please contact Socky Logo ([email protected]). She’ll give you instructions on how to be assigned a time and place to take the exam.4EXAM SCHEDULEExam 1 Wednesday September 28 Exam 2 Wednesday November 2 Exam 3 Wednesday November 30Final Exam: Scheduled by the registrar (not me)Grade will be based on 5 class exam equivalents. A maximum of 500 points (plus a few extra points). See syllabus for details.There are no makeup exams. If you miss an exam, that one will be dropped. If you miss more than one exam you will not receive a grade for the course.5Tentative coverage of Text: Oxtoby, Freeman and Block, Chemistry: Science of ChangeChapters1. The Atomic Nature of Matter (review of stuff you had in high school).2. Stoichiometry (how to count atoms by weighing them).3. Chemical Periodicity and the Formation of Simple Compounds (structure and properties of matter).Exam 1: Wednesday, September 28 (After 6 lectures)._____________________________________________________________________15. Nuclear Chemistry (nuclear structure and nuclear properties).16. Quantum Mechanics and the Hydrogen Atom (atoms as waves).17. Many-electron Atoms and Chemical Bonding (how waves interact).Exam 2: Wednesday, November 2 (9 lectures)_____________________________________________________________________18. Molecular Orbitals and Spectroscopy(interaction of light and matter).19. Coordination Complexes (chemistry of metals, the inorganic world).24. From Petroleum to Pharmaceuticals (chemistry of organic molecules, the organic world).Exam 3: Wednesday, November 30 (6 lectures)_____________________________________________________________________Period before final (3 lectures)25. Synthetic and Biological Polymers (chemistry of giant molecules and life).6Courseworks: https://courseworks.columbia.edu/When sending Email, please place in the Subject field: Chemistry C1403Office hours for Prof. Turro: 2:30-3:30 PM M/W or by appointmentTA office hours will be announced on the course home page.All queries concerning course administration to theUndergraduate Office: 340 Havemeyer (located to the right as you leave 309 Havemeyer)Ms. Socky Lugo ([email protected])Ms. Daisy Melendez (dm55 [email protected])7Who are you? 180 (or so) bright and eager students! Who am I?Professor of ChemistrySpecialist in Photochemistry, Suprmolecular Chemistry and SpectroscopyWeb site: turroserver.chem.columbia.eduBA, Wesleyan University, 1960PhD, Caltech, 1963Postdoc, Harvard, 1963Professor, Columbia, 19648Can you find Nick and Sandy Turro in this picture?9Chapter 1: The Atomic Nature of Matter.Atomic Theory of matter: How it came about from laws based on simple observations.The Mole Concept: Counting and weighing atoms and molecules.10Chapter 2: Stoichiometry(1) Writing balanced chemical equations(2) Using balanced chemical equations(3) Computing yields and determining limiting reagents11Chapter 3: Periodic Table and Molecular Structure(1)Periodic properties of the elements and the periodic table(2)Lewis structures for describing the bonding of atoms in molecules(3) The shapes and dipole moments of molecules1213The periodic table where did it come from? The BIG bang!14Chemistry is about matter and light, their interactions and transformations.All of which was created by the “Big Bang” about 10 billion year ago.As the result of the Big Bang, the atoms of the elements contained in the Periodic Table were produced.Understanding the underlying intellectual structure of the Periodic Table is an important goal of this course.So, let take a look at a preview of coming attractions for the


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