CHEMISTRY 31 - QUANTITATIVE
ANALYSIS
Fall, 2017
Meeting
time, place:
Lecture 11:00 to 11:50, Monday and Wednesday, Sequoia
301; Laboratory Sequoia 446
Instructors:
Lecture: Dr. Roy Dixon (office Sequoia 508, phone 278-6893,
email: rdixon@csus.edu)
Laboratory: Section 2 (MW 8:00 - 10:30) Dr. Alexander
Gunn, Section 3 (MW 12:00 2:30) Dr. Justin Miller-Schulze, Section 4 (MW 3:00 - 5:30)
Dr. Jahansooz Toofan, Section 5 (TuTh 9:00-11:30)
Ms. Heidi Van Atta, Sections 6 and 7 (TuTh 12:00-2:30
and 3:00 5:30, repectively) Dr. Jahansooz Toofan
(see class website for offices, contact information and office hours).
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, 9th 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 Week
Measurements (
Errors (Ch. 3) Sept.
4 46-54
Errors; Statistics (Ch. 4) Sept.
11 55-60; 64-70
Statistics (
Equilibria (Ch. 6) Sept.
25 120-126
Equilibria Oct.
2 126-133
Exam 1 (Ch. 1, 3, 4, part of 6) Oct. 4
Equilibria; Titrations (Ch. 7) Oct. 9 133-139;
145-154
Spectroscopy (Ch. 18); Chromatography (Ch. 22) Oct. 16 433-437;
604-606
Chromatography Oct.
23 609-620
Advanced Equilibria (Ch. 8), Strong Acids (Ch. 9) Oct. 30 161-182;
188-190
Advanced Equilibria, Acid-Base Equilibria (Ch. 9) Nov. 6 190-206
Exam 2 (Ch. 7, 8, 18, and 22; parts of
Ch. 6 and 9) Nov. 8
Acid-Base Equilibria; Polyprotic acids (Ch.
10) Nov. 13 211-219
Polyprotic
acids Nov.
20 219-225
Acid-Base Titrations (Ch.11) Nov.
27 233-238
Acid-Base Titrations, Catch up Dec.
4 238-242
Final Exam Dec. 11 10:15-12:15
Holidays affecting schedule: Labor Day (Sept. 4), Thanksgiving (Nov. 23th)
Posted
Information (homework solutions, example exams, assignments):
At website (http://www.csus.edu/indiv/d/dixonr/C31/C31.htm or on SacCT)
Tentative
office hours: Mon 10:30-11:00 and
12:00-12:30, or use drop in office hours (if not seeing other students for
chair duties), or make an appointment.
The office hours for the other 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. All students must attend a Safety Talk
(second lab meeting) and sign the check-in form before being
allowed to work.
Homework: This semester there will be no graded homework, but
there will be problems assigned from the textbook that will help you prepare
for the exams
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 (175 points)
Exams missed due to exceptional circumstances can be
made up on the day of the final exam.
Exams will be 40 to 50% multiple choice (need to bring a 882E type scantron for this
part), with the rest being problem solving or brief essay answers.
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, with the score based on the "resubmitted"
quiz (You get a chance to correct wrong answers).
Laboratory:
Laboratory Reports (85 pts)
Laboratory Notebook Grading (10
pts)
Lab Procedures Quiz (5 pts)
More details of the laboratory grading is provided at
the bottom of the section: laboratory report grading 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.
Laboratory
Report Grading Schedule:
Laboratory
Experiment Report Due Date Grading Tolerance#
1. Calibration of Buret/Pipet Sept. 18 2 pts N/A (0.1)
2. Water Hardness Lab Sept. 27 10
pts 0.5 (1)
3. Statistical Calculations Lab Oct. 4 5
pts N/A
4. Atomic Absorption Spectroscopy Oct. 30 12
pts 6/4 (Mg/Ca)$
5A. Ion Chromatography 1 Nov. 15 8 Pts 5
5B. Ion Chromatography 2 Nov. 27 8 Pts NA
6. Spectrophotometric Analysis Nov. 29 10 pts 2.5
ea. compound
7. Formal Water Report part A Nov. 22 5 pts N/A
7. Formal Water Report part B Dec. 4 5
pts
8. Soda Ash Lab Dec. 8* 10 pts 0.5 (0.5)
9. GC Dec.
8* 10 pts 2.5
*It is recommended that you turn in these lab reports
earlier in case you make any calculation errors.
#See notes
4 and 5 below for the meaning of the tolerance scale.
$8%
tolerance is given for Mg vs. a 4% tolerance for Ca due to lower Mg
concentrations.
Notes:
1. Laboratory experiments must be turned in by
the due date to receive full credit. If
laboratory reports are not completed or are in an incorrect format (see
Appendix III of lab manual for correct format), they will be returned without
grading. Report due dates are roughly
based on one week past the last day expected for in-lab work and may be
postponed. The penalty for late lab
experiments is 2 points off for each week late for a maximum of two weeks late. Lab
reports turned in after Dec. 8 (including recalculations/resubmissions) receive
zero credit. Also, some reports require calculations using a computer, so
it is suggested that you try to do the calculations at least a few days before
the deadline.
2. Lab report formats: Refer to Appendix III of the lab manual for
the correct format of each lab report. Data sheets or photocopies of carefully
organized lab notebook tables are needed for most reports. Reports 3, 4 and 6 require turning in a
computer-generated spreadsheet (see example spreadsheets in the lab
manual). The formal lab report (number
7) will be a 3 to 5 page written report of the analysis of the tap water sample
in the atomic absorption spectroscopy and the ion chromatography labs. This report will be graded based on the
writing quality and content. This will be submitted in two parts (introduction
and experimental methods for Part A and results and discussion for Part B) to
allow you to get feedback to improve writing.
The statistical calculation laboratory will be a series of statistical
calculations.
3. Grading will
be based on precision (2 points each for labs 1, 2, 4 and 8) and accuracy (remainder
of points for labs 2, 4 and 8 and all of the points in 5, 6, and 9).
4. Grading for accuracy will be based on the percent
error calculated from the reported value and the true value. A full score will be received if the percent
error is less than a tolerance value (1st value shown above). Percent errors larger than the tolerance will
result in loss of points. For example,
an experiment has a 0.5 % tolerance and a student's percent error is 1.2%, that
student would receive an 8.6 or a loss of 1.4 points for being 0.7% past (1.4
times) the tolerance limit. There will
be a minimum accuracy score of 40% of the points for completed reports.
5. Grading for precision will be based on reported
uncertainty. If your percent uncertainty
is less than the value listed in parentheses under tolerance, you will receive
full credit. For lab 4, you receive full
precision points by correctly calculating the uncertainty associated with each
measured concentration; the actual uncertainty value will not affect your
grade.
6. If it
appears likely a poor score was the result of an incorrect calculation or if
the initially submitted lab report was incomplete (and returned without
grading), the report may be corrected and resubmitted. The new report must be attached to the originally submitted report, must be resubmitted within two weeks of the
original deadline (first 5 labs) or by Dec. 8th (last labs), and can only be resubmitted once for
each experiment. You may not resubmit
the formal lab report.
7. If you
receive a low score, you may repeat one experiment if time permits. However, students are limited to only one
"free" replacement unknown request (subsequent unknown requests will
be taken with a 2 point penalty). No
unknown request can be made after Dec. 4th.
8. Laboratory
notebooks will be collected at random during the semester and graded for a
total of 10 points. It will be graded on 1) correct formatting (table of contents,
page numbers, etc.), 2) inclusion of pre-lab calculations needed for current
laboratory exercise, 3) a reasonable attempt to keep data organized, and 4)
data entered correctly. See online lab
notebook checklist.
9.
The laboratory procedures quiz (5 pts) will be given on the fourth
meeting of the lab (Sept. 7th or 11th) and be focused on
reading the first 18 pages of the lab manual and the class syllabus (this
document), understanding how lab grading is done, and on following safety and
procedural information given in the lab lectures during the first week.