CHEMISTRY 31 - QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS

Summer, 2016

 

Meeting time, place:

Lecture – 9:00 to 9:50, Monday through Thursday, Sequoia 452

Laboratory – 10:00 to 12:30, Monday through Thursday, Sequoia 446

 

Instructors:

Lecture: Dr. Roy Dixon (office – Sequoia 446C, phone 8-6893, email: rdixon@csus.edu)

Laboratory Section 2 Dr. Jahansooz Toofan

 

Emphasis of Course Content:

Lecture - Principles and application of chemical equilibria; measurements and associated statistics; titrations; introduction to spectroscopy and chromatography.

Laboratory – Mastering equipment for quantitative handling of chemicals; learning high precision analytical methods; handling of samples; introduction to spectroscopy and chromatography for quantitative analysis; application of statistics; introduction to report writing.

 

Texts: Harris, Quantitative Chemical Analysis, 8th edition (Note, you may use an earlier edition of the text, but you are responsible for any differences); For Lab, Chemistry 31 Laboratory Manual

 

Tentative Lecture Schedule (Amount of material covered may change slightly but test dates are rarely changed. Chapters in italics are "review" chapters.  Parts of other chapters also are review items):

Topic                                                                        Dates                           Reading 

Measurements (Ch. 1)                                               May 30 – June 2           13–24

Errors (Ch. 3)                                                            June 2 - 7                      51-64

Statistics (Ch. 4)                                                         June 7 – 13                   68-89

Equilibria (Ch. 6)                                                     June 14 – 21                 118-137

Exam 1 (Ch. 1, 3, 4, part of 6)                                 June 16

Advanced Equilibria (Ch. 7) + Strong Acids (Ch. 8)      June 21 – 27                 143-158; 163-165

Spectroscopy (Ch. 17)                                                June 28, 29                    393-399

Chromatography (Ch. 22)                                           June 30 – July 6            537-539; 542-553

July 4th Holliday – No Class

Exam 2 (Ch. 7, 17, and 22; parts of Ch. 6 and 8)    July 7

Acid-Base Equilibria (Ch.8)                                        July 11, 12                     165-177

Polyprotic acids (Ch.9)                                               July 13, 14                     173-198

Acid-Base Titrations (Ch.10), Review                         July 18-20                     205-223

Final Exam                                                               July 21                        9:00 to 11:00

 

Posted Information (homework solutions, example exams, assignments):

At website (http://www.csus.edu/indiv/d/dixonr/C31/C31.htm)

I also hope to have a Blackboard Site up for at least grade feedback.

 

Tentative office hours: Monday through Thursday from 8:50 to 9:00, Wed. 1:30 - 2:30.  The office hours for the lab instructors will be posted online later.

 

Attendance:  Attendance in the lecture will not be taken.  However, it is to your benefit to attend the lectures and quizzes can not be made up.  In the lab, the instructors reserve the right to drop students who miss too many lab meetings, who fall behind because of attendance problems, or who are consistently late to lab.

Grading:

The lecture score will account for 55% of the total score with the remainder (45%) from the lab.

 

Lecture:

         2 midterms (100 points each)

         Cumulative final exam (150 points)

Exams missed due to exceptional circumstances can be made up on the day of the final exam.

         Quizzes (50 points total)

There will be six quizzes (five that count and each worth 10 points).  You will be able to drop your lowest quiz score.  The first graded quiz will be the diagnostic quiz (given the first day in lab), with the score based on the "resubmitted" quiz (You get a chance to correct wrong answers).  Quizzes will be given every Thursday unless there is an exam.

Homework (25 points total).  Text homework problems will be assigned but not collected, but you will be assigned one or two challenging “additional” problem with each homework set that will be collected.  Homework will be collected about once per week.

 

Laboratory:

Laboratory Reports (85 pts) + 2 bonus points for meeting the High Quality Report criteria.

Laboratory Notebook Grading (10 pts)

Lab Procedures Quiz (5 pts)

More details of the laboratory grading is provided in the handout, “Chem. 31 Laboratory Report Schedule”.

 

Assignment of grades:

The break-down of grades will depend on the class average (in other words be curved), but a higher class average will result in more high grades.  The following grading scheme (excluding +’s and –‘s) can be considered “typical”:

               A                                                   90 – 100%

               B                                                    78 – 90%

               C                                                    66 – 78%

               D                                                   55 – 66%

NOTE:  There is a minimum score requirement of at least 50% in both the lecture and laboratory sections to get a grade of C- or above.

 

Cheating in class:  Student caught cheating during quizzes or exams, falsifying lab data, or plagiarizing reports will be subject to punishment.  If you have questions on what constitutes plagiarism, see the instructor. Punishment may range from receiving a zero on the quiz/exam to expulsion from the university (see http://www.csus.edu/umanual/AcademicHonestyPolicyandProcedures.htm).

 

Prerequisites: Pass Chem 1A and 1B or equivalent with grade of C- or better.  Be prepared to show proof that you have met the prerequisites in lab.