NATURAL SCIENCE I: ENERGY AND THE ENVIRONMENT
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1 NATURAL SCIENCE I: ENERGY AND THE ENVIRONMENT CORE-UA 203 Section 010 Fall 2017 Tuesdays and Thursdays 9:30 a.m. 10:45 p.m. Silver Center 207 Professor Bart Kahr Chemistry Department Brown, Room 656 Phone: bart.kahr@nyu.edu Office Hours: Tuesdays and Wednesdays, 3PM-4PM Fox News: Houston, 28 August
2 1. Course Description This course explores the scientific foundations of current environmental issues and their implications for public policy. The syllabus is divided into sections that examine current environmental themes. The first sections investigate the composition of the atmosphere and the chemical processes that cause air pollution, ozone depletion, and global warming. Moving to the study of water, we will study the properties of this unique solvent and the effect of aqueous pollutants. The course also includes an investigation of energy from chemical reactions, our continuing reliance on fossil fuels, and the potential of alternative energy sources. The laboratory experiments are closely integrated with the lecture topics and provide hands-on explorations of central course themes. Throughout the course we also examine how scientific studies of the environment are intimately connected with political, economic and policy concerns. 2. Course Learning Objectives Acquire knowledge of foundational concepts, processes, and terminology of chemistry. Develop skills in problem solving and use of quantitative reasoning. Understand the methods of scientific investigation, including the roles of experiments and computer simulations. Evaluate new advances in our understanding of environmental science as reported by news media. Examine the economic, societal, and policy aspects of environmental issues. Use evidence and critical thinking to make informed decisions about complex environmental challenges. 3. Teaching Staff Bart Kahr, Instructor of record, Tu-Th 09:30 am - 10:45 am, Silver 207. The course is staffed by three graduate students, who will be a valuable resource for you during the semester. Meetings with individual instructors can be arranged by appointment. Laboratory Instructors: Liu, Yao yl3344@nyu.edu Section Leader Liu, Yao yl3344@nyu.edu Section Leader Zhang, Dongdong dz1061@nyu.edu Section Leader Tu 11:00am - 12:40pm Silver 202 Office Hours: Tu 11:00am-12:40pm Silver 10 th floor adjunct office Tu 01:00pm - 02:40pm Silver 202 Lab Tu 03:00pm - 04:40pm Silver 202 Office Hours: M 3:00pm-04:00pm Waverly
3 Zhang, Dongdong Section Leader Hao, Yudong Section Leader Hao, Yudong Section Leader Tu 05:00pm - 06:40pm Silver 202 W 09:00am - 10:40am Silver 202 Office Hours: M 3:00pm-04:00pm Silver 10 th floor adjunct office W 11:00am - 12:40pm Silver Course Materials There are two required texts for the course that are available in the NYU Bookstore: (1) American Chemical Society, Chemistry in Context Custom Edition for NYU based on 8th edition. ISBN: This text is only available at the NYU Bookstore. (There is a 9th edition of Chemistry in Context. It is not suitable for this course). (2) Laboratory Manual for Energy and the Environment You are also required purchase safety glasses from the NYU bookstore. Many of the laboratory sessions require you to use chemicals that are potentially damaging to your eyes, so SAFETY GLASSES ARE ABSOLUTELY REQUIRED DURING THESE LABS. If you do not bring your safety glasses when required, you will not be permitted to perform the lab experiment and will not receive credit for that week s lab. Please ask for safety glasses at the bookstore and not safety goggles, which are used for majors-level Chemistry Department courses. You will be provided with additional readings, videos, and websites throughout the semester that further explore the environmental topics in the course syllabus. 5. Electronic Resources All course materials (announcements, homework instructions, additional readings, etc.) will be posted on NYU Classes under Natural Science I: Energy, Section 010. NYU Classes can be can be accessed using the ACADEMICS TAB on your NYU Home page: 6. Lecture and Laboratory Schedule Readings in this schedule are based on Chemistry in Context, 8 h Edition, custome edition. Note that the text has two sets of page numbers, as small page number for the 8th edition, and a large page number for the custom edition in an olive colored box. The numbers below refer to the large page numbers. Additional readings will be posted on the course site and announced in class. 3
4 WEEK 1: Introduction and Air Lect. 1 Tu Sept 5 Introduction: DDT & Climate Change Ch. 0. pp Sept 5, 6 No Lab Lect. 2 Th Sept 7 Air Ch. 1 pp WEEK 2: Basic Chemical Principles and Air Pollution, Especially Acid Rain Lect. 3 Tu Sept 12 Chemical Principles Ch. 1. Lab 1 Sept 12, 13 Math Review Lect. 4 Th Sept 14 Air Pollution Acid Rain Ch. 1 WEEK 3: Atoms, Molecules and Ozone Lect. 5 Tu Sept 19 Molecules, Light, Ozone Ch. 2 pp Lab 2 Sept 19, 20 Properties of Air Lect. 6 Th Sept 21 Ozone Production Ch. 2 WEEK 4: Ozone Depletion and Recovery, the Greenhouse Effect Lect. 7 Tu Sept 26 Ozone Depletion Ch. 2 Lab 3 Sept 26, 27 Properties of Light Lect. 8 Thu Sept 28 Climate & Greenhouse Gases Ch. 3 pp WEEK 5: Carbon and Climate Lect. 9 Tu Oct 3 Carbon Cycle Ch. 3 Lab 4 Oct 3,4 Sunscreens Lect. 10 Th Oct 5 Climate Change: Science & Policy Ch. 3 WEEK 6: Carbon Footprint M Oct 9 Fall recess Lect. 11 Tu Oct 10 Overflow Lecture Lab 5 Oct 10, 11 Midterm 1 Review Lect. 12 Th Oct 12 Carbon Footprint Ch. 4 pp WEEK 7: What is Energy? Exam 1 Tu Oct 17 Midterm 1 (Chapters 1-3) Lab 6 Oct 17, 18 Molecular Vibrations Lect. 12 Th Oct 19 What is Energy? & Energy from Combustion Ch. 4 WEEK 8: Fuels/Water Lect. 13 Tu Oct 24 Fossil Fuels and Biofuels Ch. 4 Lab 7 Oct 24, 25 Chemical Reactions Lect. 14 Th Oct 26 Water and Ions Ch. 5 pp WEEK 9: Concentration and Water Policy Lect. 15 Tu Oct 31 Measuring Concentration Ch. 5 Lab 8 Oct 31, Nov 1 Aqueous Ions Lect. 16 Th Nov 2 Water Quality Science and Policy Ch. 5 WEEK 10: Nuclear Energy Lect. 17 Th Nov 7 Nuclear Fission Ch. 7 (note: of NYU Edition) pp Lab 9 Nov 7,8 Review for Midterm 2 Lect. 18 Tu Nov 9 Nuclear Reactions and Half Life Ch. 7 WEEK 11: Electrochemistry & Batteries Exam 2 Tu Nov 14 Midterm 2 (Ch. 4 5) Lab 10 Nov 14,15 Water Hardness Lect. 19 Th Nov 16 Electron Transfer Reactions Ch. 8 (note: of NYU Edition) pp WEEK 12: Fuel Cells Lect. 20 Tu Nov 21 Fuel Cells Ch. 8 4
5 Nov 21,22 No class Th Nov 23 Thanksgiving WEEK 13: Solar Energy Lect. 21 Tu Nov 28 Solar Cells Ch. 8 No Lab Lab 11 Nov 28, 29 Building Batteries Lect. 22 Th Nov 30 Solar Energy - Science and Policy TBA WEEK 14: Renewable Energy Lect. 23 Tu Dec 5 Alternative Energy Sources TBA Lab 12 Dec 5, 6 Solar and PV Cells Lect. 24 Th Dec 7 What Is Our Energy Future? TBA WEEK 15: Wrapping Up Lect. 25 Tu Dec 12 What has transpired during these three months in the news? TBA Dec 12, 13 Review for final exam Lect. 26 Th Dec 14 Review for final exam WEEK 16: Final Exam Final Tu Dec 19 Final Exam (8:00 am 9:50 am), Chapters 1-5, 7, 8 I will post a skeletal version of the my ppt lectures on class. These outlines will give you enough information to reconstruct the lecture. If I post the lectures in their entirety, attendance will plummet. Students who attend class perform better than those who don't. This shouldn't be a big surprise, but it is born out by decades of comparing grades with attendance. (Is this a scientific judgment? Think about it. Nevertheless, I would encourage you to come to class and hedge your bets. 7. Grade Components Midterm Exam 1 15 % Midterm Exam 2 15 % Final Exam 25 % Homework 20 % Laboratory 25 % Extra Credit* bump in score *I will offer one extra credit opportunity due by the last day of class. I ask for a project related to energy and the environment that can take any form whatsoever, and gives you an opportunity to capitalize on your other talents. If you want to sing or rap a song about global warming, let's hear it. A poem about acid rain, write it. A mock debate between Henry Ford and Thomas Edison on who is most responsible for global warming, debate it. A dance of death & doom followed by an interpretation of the Earth reborn, dance it. Measurements of the ph of rain in Washington Square Park throughout the semester, measure it. Videos and other documentation can be uploaded to Classes (I think) clearly labeled with your name(s). I will rank your efforts (a subjective process as compared with the assignment of numerical grades which is strictly a numbers game) and give some number of extra points weighted by the ranking from say 5% to 1%, based on my analysis of your creativity. Creativity interpreted broadly is the key criterion here. The best projects will often result in a bump to the next higher grade. You may work in pairs if you choose. This is not a requirement. You surely can get an A without participating. Grades will be assigned before considering the extra credit project. 5
6 8. Exams The course has two midterm exams and a final exam on the dates given below. Midterm Exam 1 TUES, October 17 9:30 a.m. 10:45 p.m. Silver 207 Midterm Exam 2 TUES, Nov 14 9:30 a.m. 10:45 p.m. Silver 207 Final Exam TUES, Dec 19 8:00 a.m. 9:50 a.m. Silver 207 Midterm Exam 1 will contain questions on material from Chapters 1, 2 and 3. Midterm Exam 2 from Chapters 4 and 5. The final Exam will be cumulative, with an extra focus on Chapters 7 and 8. Each exam may contain one or two questions based on the laboratory projects. Exams with cover material from the text, from the lectures, from the laboratory, and from my imagination. Lectures are not checklists of relevant topics. Lectures are an opportunity for discussion and analysis of a selected number of topics in greater depth. Just because I don't mention something in lecture does not mean I don't think it is meaningful. This is a university course. If you will miss a midterm exam because of illness, you must contact Professor Kahr by before the start of the exam and provide a doctor's note explaining your absence. No makeup exam will be given for the midterms. Instead, the final exam will count as 40% of your course total. Since the final exam will be cumulative, this option is not advisable unless extreme circumstances prevail. The final exam is scheduled by the NYU Registrar s Office and no alternative exam date will be provided. If you miss the final exam for illness or emergency, you must take the final exam of one of the Spring 2018 sections. A grade of incomplete will be given for the course until next semester's instructor reports the final grade to me. Should you take an make-up exam in future, you must have the instructor sign your examination so as to establish that you were present, and so as to remind the instructor that your exam should be set aside. 9. Homeworks There will be 10 homework assignments. They will be posted on-line before Tuesday's class. They will be due 9:30 a.m. in class, the following Tuesday. In other words, homeworks will be distributed electronically, but collected as paper. Homeworks must be submitted on time for full credit. Late homeworks will be penalized 33% per day. (By Friday, it isn't worth the paper it is printed on.) We will count the highest 8 assignments. No makeups for any reason. If you suffer from an illness during the course and cannot complete a homework assignment, you must provide a doctor s note to Professor Kahr. Alternatively, if you anticipate missing a homework because of religious observance, you must notify professor Kahr in advance. 10. Laboratory Sessions You must be registered in a laboratory section in order to receive credit for the course. The sections have a capacity of 20 students, which is determined by safety issues and availability of laboratory equipment. The section enrollment will not be increased. If you are not appropriately registered for a laboratory section you will be required to drop the course. The laboratory sessions will be held in Silver 202 and will begin on September 12 & 13. There are no laboratory sessions during the first week of class. 6
7 Tu 11:00am - 12:40pm Silver 202 Tu 01:00pm - 02:40pm Silver 202 Tu 03:00pm - 04:40pm Silver 202 Tu 05:00pm - 06:40pm Silver 202 W 09:00am - 10:40am Silver 202 W 11:00am - 12:40pm Silver 202 Each weekly lab project is worth 50 points: Attendance Quiz Lab Assignment 10 points 10 points 30 points Attendance Credit: You are expected to arrive punctually for the beginning of the lab session. Arriving more than 10 minutes late will result in a loss of attendance credit for the session. Laboratory Quiz: Questions will be based on the introduction to the experiment in the laboratory manual. Arriving more than 10 minutes late for the lab will exclude you from taking the quiz. Laboratory Assignment: This assignment should be completed and submitted during the laboratory period by working collaboratively with your laboratory partner. Some laboratories may have a take-home component in addition to the in-lab exercises. Lab Absence Policies It is strongly advisable not to miss any of the lab sessions. However, it sometimes happens that you cannot attend a lab session because of serious illness or because you are observing a religious holiday. In those cases you must complete the LAB ABSENCE FORM (posted on the course site) and submit it to Professor Kahr within ONE WEEK after the missed lab. All absences because of illness must be accompanied by a doctor s note. It is also good manners to your lab instructor to inform him/her of your absence. Unexcused lab absences will result in loss of credit for the lab session. Because of the logistics of using the laboratory room, no make-up labs are possible. Permission to attend another lab section to complete a lab project will only be given under special circumstances that must be discussed with Professor Kahr and your lab instructor in advance. 11. And Finally... Your grade in this class is not nearly as important as what we will be discussing. Keep that in perspective. According to the philosopher Kathleen Moore, "It is wrong to wreck the world." First and foremost, we must figure out how not to wreck the world. 7
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