Lecture Description
Professor Sylvia Ceyer devotes this lecture to a discussion of the periodic table, beginning with its history. Period trends are covered, including ionization energy, electron affinity, elecrtonegativity, and atomic sizes. The lecture concludes with isoelectronicity, where two molecular entities have the same number of valence electrons and the same structure, regardless of the nature of the elements involved.
Course Description
This is an introductory chemistry course, emphasizing basic principles of atomic and molecular electronic structure, thermodynamics, acid-base and redox equilibria, chemical kinetics, and catalysis. This course also introduces the chemistry of biological, inorganic, and organic molecules.
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Transcript
| Lecture Notes
Course Index
- Atomic Theory of Matter
- Discovery of Nucleus
- Wavelike Properties of Radiation
- Particle-like Nature of Light
- Matter As a Wave
- The Hydrogen Atom
- Hydrogen Atom Wavefunctions
- P Orbitals
- Electronic Structure of Multielectron Atoms
- Periodic Trends in Elemental Properties
- Covalent Bonds
- Lewis Diagrams
- Breakdown of Octet Rule
- Molecular Orbital Theory
- Valence Bond Theory and Hybridization
- Hybridization and Chemical Bonding
- Bond Energies / Bond Enthalpies
- Free Energy of Formation
- Chemical Equilibrium
- Chemical Equilibrium (cont.)
- Acid-Base Equilibrium
- Acid-Base Equilibrium (cont.)
- Acid-Base Equilibrium: Titrations
- Acid Base Titrations and Oxidation/Reduction
- Oxidation/Reduction
- Oxidation/Reduction (cont.)
- Transition Metals 1
- Transition Metals 2: Crystal Field Theory
- The Shapes of Molecules: VSEPR Theory
- Transition Metals 3
- Kinetics 1
- Kinetics 2
- Kinetics 3
- Kinetics 4
- Kinetics 5: Catalysis
- Review for Principles of Chemical Science, Normal Track