ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY COURSE SYLLABUS FALL 2010

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ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY COURSE SYLLABUS FALL 2010 Course Description: An introduction to the theory and practice of quantitative analysis. Lecture, two hours; laboratory, three or four hours. Prereq: CHE 107 and 115. Course Information: Lectures: Tuesday and Thursday, 9:30-10:20 a.m., CP- 222 Credits: 3 cr (Secs. 1 & 2) or 4 cr (Secs. 3 & 4) Textbook: D. A. Skoog, D. M. West, F. J. Holler, and S. R. Crouch: Analytical Chemistry: An Introduction, 7th Edition, Saunders College Publishing, 1999. Laboratory: Monday and Tuesday, 1:00-5:00 pm, CP- 208 and CP- 236. Go to CP 208 first. The first lab meetings will be on Monday, August 30 or Tuesday, August 31 for the Monday (Secs. 1 & 3) or Tuesday (Secs. 2 & 4) Laboratories, respectively. Laboratory Experiments: Complete copies of the laboratory handouts are available on the course Web site or on a CD (on request). Go to http://www.chem.uky.edu/courses/che226/welcome.html Instructor: Dr. Jason DeRouchey Office: 184A Chemistry- Physics Building Office Hours: Tuesday & Thursday 10:30 am 12:00 noon or by appointment (send an email to arrange meeting) E-mail: derouchey@uky.edu (All emails must have 226 in the Subject header line) Phone: TBA Teaching Assistants Pauline Stratman Brent Casper Ting Wang Office Sander s Brown Rm 125 A061 (ASTeCC) CP106 Phone 859-257-1412 x 247 859-218-6551 859 285 9637 E-mail Pauline.Stratman@uky.edu brent.casper@uky.edu twa222@uky.edu Office Hours Mon 10-11, Wed 3-4, Thu 2-3 Mon 11-12, Wed 10-12 Fri 1-4 CHE 226 Analytical Chemistry Page 1 of 7 Spring 2010 Course Syllabus

Tentative Lecture Coverage: Topics Chapters Introduction 1 Units, Concentration and Stoichiometry 3 Experimental Error 5, 6 Statistical Analysis: Evaluating the Data 7 Gravimetric Analysis 8 Chemical Equilibrium Basics 4 Electrolyte Effects 9 Equilibria in Complex Systems 10 Acid- Base Titrations 11, 12, 13, 14 Complexation and Precipitation Titrations 15 Spectrochemical Analysis 21, 22, 23 Separation Methods 24, 25, 26 Electrochemistry Introduction 16 Electrode Potentials 17 Oxidation/Reduction Titrations 18 Potentiometry 19 Examinations: Date Time Exam I Thursday, Sept. 23, 9:30 am Exam II Thursday, Oct. 28, 9:30 am Exam III Thursday, Dec. 02, 9:30 am Final Exam Tuesday Dec. 14, 10:30 am The Final Exam is comprehensive. Grading Procedure and Scale: Component 3 Credits 4 Credits Best 2 of 3 hour Exams* 35% 30% Final Exam 27% 20% Laboratory 33% 45% Excel Assignments 5% 5% Total 100% 100% CHE 226 Analytical Chemistry Page 2 of 7 Spring 2010 Course Syllabus

* Exception: Exam III will not simply be dropped if its score is more than 15% below both Exam I and Exam II. In that case, 15% will be added to the score and all three will be averaged. Grade Final Average: A 89.50 100.0 B 79.50 89.49 C 69.50 79.49 D 59.50 69.49 E 59.49 and Below A student who scores 90.00% or better on each of the three mid-term exams will be exempted from the Final Exam. The average of the three mid-term Exams will then be used for the total percentage for all examinations in the course. Suggested Homework: Suggested homework problems will be assigned as the material is covered. Homework will not be collected and graded, but the bulk of the Exams will reflect the material in the assigned problems. E-mail: The instructor will send you important information, files, reminders, nags, etc., during the course of the semester. You should check your e- mail at least daily. We will send e- mails to the preferred address that you provided at the beginning of the semester. We will put the course number, 226, in the Subject header of all emails sent to you. This will help you filter our email into a separate mailbox, if your software has such a feature. In turn, you must include 226 someplace in the Subject header of all email you send to the instructors. I probably get 40 spam emails a day that get through my spam filter system. Putting 226 in the subject header will filter your important email to my course mailbox, so that I can tend to it as soon as possible. Previous 226 Exams: Several semesters of past CHE 226 exams are available on the course Website for you to peruse and self- test. Answers are not provided on the old exams. There are many, many problems in the textbook that do have answers. Use these to get up to speed. If you have any questions or are confused about any of the problems on the old exams, feel free to ask one of the instructors. Make-up Exams: CHE 226 Analytical Chemistry Page 3 of 7 Spring 2010 Course Syllabus

No make- up examinations will be given regardless of the reason for missing an exam. Dropping the lowest examination grade is designed to compensate for this, among other reasons. Calculators: Use of a calculator during examinations is permitted as long as they are not shared between students. The latter will be considered as cheating. Programmable calculators must have their memories cleared prior to use in an exam. In any event, test problems are usually designed so as to minimize arithmetic. Ordinary arithmetic errors will be penalized very little. Points will be deducted if an improper number of significant figures in used in the final arithmetic answer. Important Dates: Wednesday, August 25 Tuesday, August 31 Monday, September 6 Wednesday, September 15 Thursday, September 23 Monday, October 18 Thursday, October 28 Friday, November 5 November 24-27 Tuesday, November 30 Thursday, December 2 Friday, December 10 Tuesday, December 14 First day of Classes Last day to ADD a class for the Spring 2010 Semester. Labor Day - Academic Holiday Last day to DROP a course withdraw without it appearing on your transcript. Last day to change grading option (P/F, Credit/Audit). 1 st EXAM Midterm of 2010 Fall Semester 2 nd EXAM Last day to WITHDRAW from a course with a W. After this date, can withdraw only for urgent non- academic reasons. Thanksgiving, Academic Holiday Last day the CHE 226 Laboratory will be open. All students must formally check out of the Laboratory on or before this date. 3 rd EXAM Last day of classes. All CHE 226 laboratory reports must be submitted by 5:00 pm. FINAL EXAM, 10:30 A.M. Dropping the Course: A student can DROP the course up to September 15 without it appearing on the transcript, and to WITHDRAW from the course up to November 30 with a W. After November 30, a student cannot WITHDRAW from a course except for urgent reasons related to extended illness or equivalent non-academic reasons, and then only with the approval of the Dean of his or her College. The instructor does not make this decision. You MUST formally check out of the laboratory as soon as possible in the process of dropping or withdrawing from the course or simply abandoning it in order to ensure that (a) all laboratory CHE 226 Analytical Chemistry Page 4 of 7 Spring 2010 Course Syllabus

equipment issued to you is accounted for and not damaged, (b) you are not charged penalty fees by the Department. If you have not checked out of the Laboratory by the time final grades for the course are due at the Registrar, you have not completed the course and you will be assigned an incomplete grade, which will automatically convert to an E after a year unless a regular letter grade replaces it. In addition, if you do not check out in a timely manner and the Department personnel have to go through your locker, you will incur a $50 fee, in addition to the cost of any damaged, broken, or missing equipment. If necessary, the Department can ask that a Registration Stop be placed on your official record, which will prevent any further academic actions until this financial matter is cleared. Officially checking into the laboratory constitutes acceptance of these terms. Classroom Manners: In addition to scholarly demeanor, common old fashioned manners are expected of everyone involved in CHE 226, including the instructors. Arrive on time for all CHE 226 lectures and labs. It is disruptive to and disrespectful of your fellow students who are trying to follow the lecture and learn the material, as well as to the Instructor, when people arrive late. If you don t wish to attend one or more lectures or lab sessions, that may not be wise, but it is your choice. If you do attend, be on time. If tardiness becomes a problem, the instructor will simply lock the doors at 9:30. Finally, unless your mother cleans up after you here at UK, please clean up after yourself in the lecture room so that the physical surroundings remain appropriate for scholarly activities. In the laboratory, cleaning up properly will be part of your grade. Cell Phones: If you carry a cell phone or beeper, double- check before the class starts to ensure that it is completely off or in silent mode. If a cell phone or beeper goes off during a lecture or lab, it shall be turned over to the instructor immediately. It will be returned at the end of the period the first time this happens; increasingly more drastic measures will result for any additional transgressions. Academic Accommodations: If you have a documented disability that requires academic accommodations, please see me as soon as possible. In order to receive accommodations in this course, you must provide me with a Letter of Accommodation from the Disability Resource Center (Room 2, Alumni Gym, 257-2754, jkarnes@uky.edu) for coordination of campus disability services available to students with disabilities. We can then collaborate on the best solution. Academic Dishonesty: You are hereby notified that the Department of Chemistry considers any type of academic dishonesty cheating, plagiarism, representing the work of others as your own, dry labbing, etc a very serious offense and we will respond appropriately in the event of any apparent academic dishonesty. CHE 226 Analytical Chemistry Page 5 of 7 Spring 2010 Course Syllabus

The minimum (and required) penalty for proven academic dishonesty (cheating) in any form or manner will result in an automatic grade of a zero for that assignment for a student s first offense at the University. Instructors are not permitted the option of letting it go or making some informal agreement. Additional penalties may be imposed for a first offense depending on the degree of severity of the transgression and other factors. These can include extra work, reduced letter grade, or a failure of the course. For a penalty less severe than a failure of the course, a letter of warning for a minor offense is placed in the student s official record (which is destroyed on graduation if there are no subsequent offenses). The minimum penalty for another offense subsequent to a minor offense is failure of the course (which is subject to the Repeat Option). The minimum penalty for an offense subsequent to a major offense is suspension. A penalty more severe than failure of the course may be imposed for a first or second offense, subject to approval of the Department Chair and the Dean. These new rules and the rights of appeal are rather detailed and complicated. Additional information about academic dishonesty and other student- related matters is available from several sources: The current version of the Student Rights and Responsibilities manual (the most pertinent to academic dishonesty are in Sections 6.3). http://www.uky.edu/studentaffairs/code/part2.html See the home page for the Office of Academic Ombud Services for a definition of plagiarism, how to avoid plagiarism and UK s new academic offense policy. http://www.uky.edu/ombud A link to a paper Plagiarism: What is it? may be found at the Ombud Web site. http://www.uky.edu/ombud/plagiarism.pdf The Ombud Web site also includes a link to a Prentice Hall Companion Web site Understanding Plagiarism, which includes brief quizzes on related topics. http://wps.prenhall.com/hss_understand_plagiarism_1/0,6622,427064-,00.html Dr Grossman has also provided a summary of the new rules on his web site. http://www.chem.uky.edu/courses/common/plagiarism.html Chemistry instructors and the Department of Chemistry will carefully follow the procedures required of us. Dry Labbing or Pencil Titrating are terms that describe the act of making up or falsifying laboratory data. This is clearly a form of academic dishonesty, cheating. In a nutshell, plagiarism is defines as taking the work, the words, the ideas of others and presenting them as your own without proper scholarly attribution. This could be a proper reference or citation to actual quotation marks around any work taken verbatim CHE 226 Analytical Chemistry Page 6 of 7 Spring 2010 Course Syllabus

that is much longer than a short phrase. Although students will often work in pairs and share data, and talk informally about the experiment and their results, Each student must prepare and write his or her own laboratory report completely independently. You must compose your lab reports in your own words, not simply copy the text directly from the laboratory handout. If you have any questions at all about what may constitute academic dishonesty, cheating, or plagiarism in the course, please ask the Instructor and/or the Teaching Assistants BEFORE you proceed. It is wiser to err on the side of caution. Revised August, 2010 Copyright by the Department of Chemistry,, 2010 CHE 226 Analytical Chemistry Page 7 of 7 Spring 2010 Course Syllabus