Chem 31 Quantitative Analysis
Spring 2012
Instructor: Brad Baker
Office: Sequoia Room 530
Phone: 278 7409
Email: bbaker@csus.edu
Office Hours: Mondays, 12:00 pm to 1:30 pm in Sequoia 530
Tuesdays, 11:00 am to 12:30 pm in Sequoia 530
and by
appointment
Course website:
http://www.csus.edu/indiv/b/bakerb/Chem31/Chem31.htm
Lecture Meeting Time: Mondays and Wednesdays 11:00 am to 11:50 am
Lecture Location: Sequoia 456
Lab Meeting Times:
Section 2: Mondays
and Wednesdays, 8:00 to 10:30 am
Section
3: Mondays and Wednesdays, 1:30 to 4:00
pm
Section
4: Tuesdays and Thursdays, 8:00 to 10:30
am
Section
5: Tuesdays and Thursdays, 1:00 to 3:30
pm
Lab Location: Sequoia 446
Midterm exams: February 29 and April 18, during regularly
scheduled class time.
Final exam: Wednesday, May 16, 10:15 am 12:15 pm in
Sequoia 456
Textbook: Quantitative Chemical Analysis (eighth
edition), by Daniel C. Harris (required)
Lab Manual: Inorganic Quantitative Analysis, Spring 2012
(required)
Prerequisites: A
C- or better in Chem 1A and Chem 1B or equivalent.
Overview: The ability to accurately and precisely
determine the amount of an unknown substance in a sample is critically
important for a scientist in todays world.
Careers in a broad range of fields such as forensics, medicine, and
environmental monitoring, to name just a few, rely on quantitative chemistry
skills to provide accurate and precise measurements that will guide decision
making processes, provide better patient care, and lead to new scientific
discoveries. This semester you will
learn the laboratory skills necessary to perform accurate and precise analyses
on a range of liquid and solid samples containing various unknowns. You will practice your skills as an
analytical chemist and demonstrate your ability to provide accurate and precise
results. In the lecture you will learn
the theory behind the techniques applied in the lab, how to report your data in
the appropriate manner, and further your understanding of equilibrium
chemistry.
Tentative Lecture Schedule:
Week of: January 23 Measurements, Precision and
errors
January 30
Propagation of uncertainty, Statistics
February 6
Statistics, Chemical equilibrium
February 13
Solubility, Acids and bases
February
20 Acids and bases, Titrations
February 27 Activity, Midterm
March 5 Multiple Equilibria
March 12 Regression, Calibration
March 26 Spectroscopy
April 2 Chromatography
April
9 Monoprotic Acids and Bases, Buffers
April 16 Buffers, Midterm
April 23 Polyprotic Acids and Bases,
Polyprotic buffers
April 30 Polyprotic Acids and Bases,
Acid/base titrations
May 7 Acid/base titrations
Adding
and getting dropped: There are usually more students
wanting to take this course than we can accommodate. We are ultimately limited by the amount of
space and equipment available in the laboratory. During the first week of lab, enrolled
students that are late or do not attend the lab section to which they have
enrolled will automatically be dropped from the course to make room for a more
dedicated student. If you wish to be
added to the course, you must attend the lab section that you want to add and
get your name on the add list. Students
will be added according to the following priority: graduating seniors, seniors, juniors,
sophomores, freshmen, second bachelors, and finally open university. Chemistry majors will be given priority over
all other majors regardless of class rank.
A students major is determined by their current classification; being
in the process of changing majors does not count. If you are enrolled in one lab section, but
wish to switch to another, it is up to you to find someone enrolled in that
section that is willing to switch positions with you, and then alert the
instructors.
Grading: Your final grade for Chem 31 will be based 55 % on
the lecture, and 45% on the laboratory.
Lecture: The lecture grade will consist of a cumulative final
exam (35%), 2 midterms (25% each), and a quiz grade (15%). If your overall quiz grade is greater than
one of your midterm grades, then the quiz grade will additionally replace the
low midterm grade. In that case the quiz
grade would count as 40% of the lecture grade.
Midterms may only be missed for an official university sponsored event
or with a signed note from a medical doctor stating that you were too sick or
injured to attend the exam. A multiple
choice quiz will be given every Wednesday at the beginning of class (13 total).
No partial credit is available on
quizzes, however, you must show your work to receive any credit. Quiz answers must be handed in on 8.5" x
11" paper that has not been ripped from a binder. Your quiz grade will be the average of your
highest 9 quiz scores. Quizzes will
cover material from the assigned reading and problems from the textbook (see the
additional handout). Quizzes cannot be
made up for any reason and must be finished in the allotted time period. You are responsible for material and concepts
covered in the assigned reading and problems, and for information presented
both visually and verbally in class.
Laboratory: Your laboratory grade will consist of a laboratory
notebook (10%), and 9 laboratory reports (90% total). Laboratory notebooks will be checked twice at
random times during the semester in lab.
Your laboratory notebook grade
will be based on the criteria given on page 11 and 12 of your lab manual. The
grading of laboratory reports will be based primarily on the accuracy of the
unknown analyses (more than 80% of the report grade), with a smaller fraction
based on precision of analyses. Note that you will need to turn in a full
report complete with graphs and or statistical analysis in some cases for it to
be graded. For the Atomic Absorption
Spectroscopy experiment, a more detailed and formal lab report is
required. Details for the lab reports
and specific grading of reports will be provided in the laboratory.
Assignment of grades: The following grading scheme (excluding +s and s)
can be considered "typical":
A 90 100%
B 79 89%
C 68 78%
D 57 67%
F < 57%
The grading scale may be adjusted downward to increase the overall average
letter grade of the class, but it will not be adjusted upward. NOTE: There is a minimum score requirement of
at least 50% in both the lecture and laboratory sections to get an overall
grade of C- or above.
Course
Objectives:
-Build an appreciation for the field of
analytical chemistry.
-Develop the wet chemistry skills
necessary to carry out precise concentration measurements in aqueous solutions.
-Learn how to evaluate the quantitative
results of an experiment using statistical methods.
-Understand the fundamentals of chemical
equilibrium.
-Understand the chemistry of strong and
weak acids and bases, and buffer solutions.
-Become acquainted with some common
analytical instrumentation.
Examples
of Course Outcomes (by the end of this course, students should be able to):
-Report the result of an analysis using the proper
number of significant figures, and provide the uncertainty in the result using
accepted statistical methods.
-Use a spreadsheet to reduce calculation time when
analyzing experimental data.
-Determine the concentration of a trace unknown in a
liquid or solid sample to within a fraction of a percent precision.
-Use equilibrium constants to determine the
concentration of a slightly soluble compound or mixture of compounds in aqueous
solution.
-Predict the pH of an aqueous solution during the
titration of strong and weak acids and bases.
-Understand buffer solutions and predict changes in pH
of a buffer when an acid or base is added.
-Demonstrate the calculations necessary to produce a buffer
solution of a specific pH.
-Produce a series of accurate and precise standards
necessary for the calibration of modern chemical instrumentation.
-Obtain and interpret the results of chromatography
and spectroscopy data.
Expectations
I expect you to:
-Respect your classmates and instructor at all times.
-Be on time to class and lab.
-Come to class prepared with the assigned reading
completed and ready to answer questions or work on problems in class.
-Spend time outside of class learning course material.
-Take responsibility for your own work, learning, and
grades.
-Have academic integrity.
please
see: http://www.csus.edu/umanual/AcademicHonestyPolicyandProcedures.htm
-Finish laboratory work in the assigned laboratory
time.
-Be excited about learning and doing chemistry.
You should expect your
instructors to:
-Respect students.
-Be on time to class and lab.
-Be knowledgeable and
prepared to teach the course material.
-Treat and grade each student
fairly and equally.
-Be at posted office hours
and willing to assist you with coursework.
-Be enthusiastic about
teaching course subject matter.