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Nov 21, 2024
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CHEM 122 - General Chemistry II Credits: 4 Semesters Offered: Fall, Spring Campus/Sites Offered: Charleston, Henderson, North Las Vegas Offering Note: No additional information available.
Description An application of chemical principles to inorganic systems. Emphasis on thermodynamics, equilibrium and kinetics.
Student Learning Outcomes
- Differentiate basic chemical kinetics and perform calculations for rate laws, rate constants, half-lives and reaction order.
- Relate the connection between reaction mechanism and rate.
- Recognize dynamic equilibrium, formulate the equilibrium constant expression for a reaction, and perform equilibrium calculations.
- Indicate how equilibrium systems will respond to changes in conditions using LeChatelier’s Principle.
- Define Arrhenius, Bronsted, and Lewis acids and bases.
- Perform pH calculations for acids, bases, buffers and salts in solution.
- Perform quantitative solubility calculations under a wide range of conditions; formulate oxidation-reduction reactions using the half-reaction method.
- Sketch, label and describe the operation of an electrochemical cell.
- Perform voltage and Faraday Law calculations for voltaic and electrolysis cells.
- Recognize connections between cell potentials and equilibrium constants or free energy in cell reactions.
- Explain and evaluate basic thermodynamic values of entropy, enthalpy, and free energy in real chemical systems and from standard tables.
- Describe nuclear fission, fusion, transmutation, and radioactivity.
- Evaluate environmental chemistry issues and apply chemical principles to recognize the importance of these processes.
- Identify coordination compounds and determine their geometry, isomers, magnetic and color properties based on ligand field theory.
- Recognize functional groups, patterns of reaction, and isomers for basic organic molecules.
- Keep a professional lab notebook; demonstrate chemical separation techniques to metal cations.
- Manipulate data by graphical solutions to data acquired in the lab.
- Evaluate uncertainty in lab data and convey results in written reports.
Prerequisite: CHEM 121 with a grade of “C” or higher Corequisite: None Graded: Letter Grade
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