PCC-12403 General Chemistry 2

Course

Credits 3.00

Teaching methodContact hours
Tutorial18
Practical24
Course coordinator(s)dr. CW Hoogendam
Lecturer(s)dr. CW Hoogendam
dr. LH Beun
Examiner(s)dr. CW Hoogendam

Language of instruction:

Dutch or English (depending on your study programme)

Assumed knowledge on:

PCC-12303 General Chemistry 1

Continuation courses:

PCC-21802 Introductory Thermodynamics A, PCC-23303 Introductory Thermodynamics B

Contents:

Many disciplines in the fields of life sciences, environmental sciences and technology build on concepts from physics and chemistry. The courses General Chemistry 1 and 2 intend to make you familiar with these general concepts. Among the concepts are matter and energy, size and scale, quantization of energies, driving forces, change and equilibrium. The starting point for the exploration of the various concepts is observation of the world we live in. From there, a journey is undertaken in search of the physical and chemical laws that govern the world around us. Concepts are worked out both theoretically and experimentally in tutorials and practical classes within themes and contexts from various fields. In General Chemistry 2 the emphasis is on physical and chemical properties of atoms, ions and molecules. Subjects treated within this course include transport under the influence of concentration gradients, redox reactions and redox potentials, atomic and molecular structure, quantization, intramolecular interactions and spectrophotometry.

Learning outcomes:

After successful completion of this course students are expected to be able to:
- analyze and examine aspects of chemical mass transport (friction, drift, flux, diffusion, ionic mobility) and apply these to topics like Fick’s first law, membrane potentials and electrical conductance of a solution;
- analyze and examine aspects of electrochemistry (half reactions, electrochemical cells oxidation numbers, Nernst equation) and apply these to topics like spontaneity of chemical reactions, electrode potentials, equilibrium constants of electrochemical reactions and concentration measurements;
- outline the principles of the quantum mechanical model for single and multi-electron atoms and connect these to trends in the periodic table of elements and topics like the aufbau principle, atomic orbitals and energy levels in atoms;
- construct Lewis structures of simple inorganic molecules and classify their shapes using the VSEPR model;
- apply Lambert Beer's law and understand absorption and emission of electromagnetic radiation;
- execute experiments in the domain of general and physical chemistry following a given protocol and analyze the outcomes.

Activities:

- participation in tutorials;
- participation in practicals;
- independent study.

Examination:

Written exam with multiple choice questions . All practical exercises need to be completed successfully (go/no go). Partial results are valid for six years.

Literature:

Syllabus and practical manual are available at the WUR-shop.

ProgrammePhaseSpecializationPeriod
Compulsory for: BBTBiotechnologyBSc3MO
BSWSoil, Water, AtmosphereBSc5AF
BFTFood TechnologyBSc2MO
BESEnvironmental SciencesBSc3AF