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Chemistry 101, Section A02 Fall 2016CRN 10459

•Instructor: Dr. Rob Lipson•Office: Elliott Teaching Wing Building, Dean’s Office, Room 166•Lectures BWC B150, TWF 9:30-10:20am•Phone: 250-721-7062•Office hours: By appointment by emailing Valeria at scieoff@uvic.ca

Chem 101

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The program for today:

1. Administrative stuff2. What’s Chemistry 101 all about?3. On with the course

Chem 101

No need to take a lot of notes. It’s all on-line!

Prerequisites:1.BC Chem. 11 and Math 12 or Pre-Calculus 12 or equivalent

2.Must be registered in a lab

3.Students without prerequisites will be dropped on September 15th

Direct all your administrative questions about course and Mastering Chemistry to the Course Coordinator Prof. Sandy Briggs

briggsag@uvic.ca

Office Elliott 313; 250-721-7163

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Course information

• Chem 101 is in CourseSpaces, linked from your MyPage. •Prerequisites http://web.uvic.ca/calendar2016-09/CDs/CHEM/101.html•See Course Information and Syllabus in CourseSpaces

•iClicker information is in CourseSpaces.Chem 101

• Be sure that you are registered in a lab section as soon as possible. Labs start the week of September 12th. You must be registered by the 12th to attend the first lab.

• Read the introduction and be prepared to do Laboratory Exercise #1

• You MUST wear safety glasses to enter the Chemistry Laboratory during the week of September 12th. Glasses can be purchased at the BookStore

• Direct all your administrative questions about labs to the Senior Lab Instructor for First-Year, Monica Reimer firstchemlab@uvic.ca,Office Elliott 228

• Students who previously passed the lab are required to take passed lab credit rather than repeat the lab. See Monica

Resources

• Custom textbook• Lecture notebook• E-book• Chem. 101 lab manual (in the Book Store now)

• iClicker. Must register at Uvicclicker registration site, NOT at the iClicker company site.

Sorry, text and notes are on back order. Will be here soon.

Custom textbook + two full-colour lecture books (no need to print outline notes, no need for coursepack) + 2 years access to MasteringChemistry + custom ebook + full ebook 13thedition

The lecture books will not include C102 as they are late coming from the publisher so hang on to your receipt to get it from the Bookstore later in the year.

is a custom version of

Other Resources• **Section website:http://web.uvic.ca/~rlipson/C101-2016/

• Office Hours with your prof: Elliott second floor lobby. Hope to open the week of September 12th. See CourseSpaces.

Two (2) midterm tests 20%Seven (7) graded quizzes 7%iClicker participation 3%Laboratory Work 33%Final Examination 37%

Evaluation

•Midterm #1: Fall 2016, Friday 14 October, 5-6 pm•Midterm #2: Fall 2016, Friday 18 November, 5-6 pm

Final Exam: Set by registrar in the week of December 5-19, 2016. Don’t make travel plans which conflict with these dates.

2009 -10

– An iClicker personal response remote is required for this course. – You must obtain an iClicker at the Bookstore and use it throughout the duration of this course. Either a first- or second-generation clicker is OK.

iClicker

If you must replace your batteries, replace with Energizer AAA.

– Do not use Duracell (they are, or at least were, a bit short for the casing).

– Do not use rechargeable batteries (they harm the clicker).

Bring your clicker to class every day!

Make sure your clicker is ON when answering!

Do not submerge your clicker in liquid and avoid liquid near the clicker.

Check out the e-learning site for FAQ about clickers.

http://elearning.uvic.ca/iclicker/students

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Burning 12.0 g of carbon in 32.0 g oxygen(O2) according to

C (s) + O2 (g) CO2 (g)results in how many moles of carbon

dioxide?

A. 0.5B. 1C. 2D. 2.7E. none of the above

Chem 101

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Burning 12.0 g of carbon in 32.0 g oxygen(O2) according to

C (s) + O2 (g) CO2 (g)results in how many moles of carbon

dioxide?

A. 0.5B. 1C. 2D. 2.7E. none of the above

Chem 101

Chapter 1. ELECTRONIC STRUCTURE OF ATOMS (6-7 h). Light and electromagnetic radiation; Wave-particle duality; quantization; Bohr model; atomic spectra; Uncertainty Principle; quantum mechanics; wave functions; quantum numbers; atomic orbitals; electron configurations; many-electron atoms; electron spin; Pauli Exclusion Principle; Hund’s Rule; introduction to transition metals; Periodic Table.

Chapter 2. PERIODIC PROPERTIES (3-4 h). Historical development of the periodic table; nuclear charge; sizes of atoms and ions; ionization energy; electron affinity.

Chapter 3. IONIC AND COVALENT BONDING (5 h). Lewis structures; octet rule; formal charges; ionic and covalent bonding; bond polarity and electronegativity; resonance structures; strengths of covalent bonds; bond lengths.

Course Syllabus

Course Syllabus

Chapter 4. MOLECULAR GEOMETRY AND BONDING, METALLIC BONDING (6-7 h). Shapes of molecules; VSEPR model; molecular polarity; hybrid orbitals; multiple bonds; delocalized p bonding; molecular orbitals of hydrogen, bond order; metallic bonding.

Chapter 5. INTERMOLECULAR FORCES (3 h). Liquids; ion-dipole and dipole dipole forces; London dispersion forces; hydrogen bonding; liquid crystals; ionic liquids.

Chapter 6. INTRODUCTION TO ORGANIC CHEMISTRY (5 h). Organic structures; physical properties; hydrocarbons; alkanes and cycloalkanes; isomerism; nomenclature; alkenes; alkynes; addition reactions; aromatic hydrocarbons; alcohols and ethers; aldehydes and ketones; carboxylic acid and derivatives; chirality.

Chapter 7. SOLIDS & MODERN MATERIALS (4 h). Polymers, semiconductors; liquid crystals, superconducting materials.

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Course plan

Chem 101

Chem 101 19

At the end of the course you should be able to:• Understand the molecular basis for the

properties of everyday materials • Determine the electronic structure of an

atom and understand the theoretical basis for the arrangement of electrons

• Determine the nature of chemical bonding in molecules and ions using the periodic table

• Predict the shapes of covalent molecules • Identify types of intermolecular forces and

predict those that are important for a given molecule

• Relate the chemical and physical properties of substances to molecular structure, chemical bonding, and intermolecular interactions

• Identify organic functional groups and understand their chemical reactivities

• Identify and name isomeric hydrocarbon structures

If you love Chem 101…You can take Chem 102 which covers basic properties of gases and liquids, aspects of thermodynamics (enthalpy, entropy, free energy), equilibrium, and kinetics (rates of reactions). It’s all done with an emphasis of how these concepts relate to problems of environmental significance.

You will be well-prepared for 2nd year Chemistry courses.

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•Read the text before the lecture.

•Participate in clicker questions.

•Respect classmates and instructor (quiet in class, please). We’re not finished until 20 minutes past the hour.

•Respect classmates and instructor (cell phone off during classes). See “cell phone karma is real” on Youtube. link

• Be responsible for your own class notes.

•Do your own work.

•Do the on-line Homework Assignments and Graded Quizzes in Mastering Chemistry.

Expectations:

Let’s explore CourseSpaces for C101

http://coursespaces.uvic.ca/course/view.php?id=20198

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