Wednesday, December 29, 2010

First Day of Class!


Check back here for class announcements and information, including answers to questions I get via email. If you really want to dig in, you can check out the website at http://www.highlands.edu/chemistry.

The first day of class for the Spring Semester is January 10, 2011. In the first class meeting we will cover the syllabus, web site, and begin Chapter 1.
Don't forget that the lecture notes are posted at http://web.me.com/hmoody/Chemistry/Chem1211Klect.html. To enhance your learning experience, I highly recommend that you print the lecture notes before coming to class. Otherwise you will have difficulty keeping up.

Also, I highly recommend you view the How to Study podcast at         .

Chapter 1 Hints!

As you study Sections 1.8 through 1.14 of Chapter 1, you will develop skills that you will need to further understand chemistry. Do not just learn to go through the motions in a way to work a certain kind of question. Instead, keep in mind why you are approaching a problem in a particular way. Develop a reasoning strategy. Develop a plan on how to solve the problem. Then develop the detailed solution. look at a problem to determine what is being asked for and then develop your plan for solving the problem.

Saturday, November 27, 2010

Class Cancelled, Monday, Nov. 29

Monday's lecture is canceled due to an unscheduled doctors appointment. The test will be given Wednesday as originally planned. If you are scheduled to makeup a test on Monday afternoon at two o'clock, that will be given as scheduled in Dr. Moody's office, W341.

If you have any questions about the test, you are more than welcome to come to my office Monday afternoon.

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Test Make-Up Date

If you missed a test, you can make it up on Nov 29 or Nov 30 at 2:00 pm. The classroom will be announced in class.

If you intend on making up a test, please let me know which test and which make-up period you will attend.

Good luck.

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Test 3, Chapter 7 & 8

Our next test on Chapter 7 & 8 will be next Wednesday & Thursday, Nov 3 & 4. Study hard. Hit the Lewis Structures.

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Test #2 Chapter 4, 5, and 6

The Test covering Chapter 4, 5, and 6 will be on Oct, 18 and 19. Good luck.

Topics include atomic theory, quantum numbers, electronic configurations, chemical periodicity and the periodic table, electrolytes, and chemical reactions.

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Class Cancelled

Lectures on Wed, Sept 29, and Thur, Sept 30, are cancelled.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

I want you to succeed in chemistry.

Several students are having difficulty with the course so far. If your test grade was less than 60, I expect you to make an appointment with me next week. I will bring the Office Hour Signup List to class this week and next Monday. After that, openings will be posted on my office door. Please sign up for one of the available 15 minute meetings.

In preparation for the visit, I highly encourage you to view the How To Study podcast at http://web.me.com/hmoody/Chemistry/Podcast/Entries/2007/10/10_How_to_Study_for_a_Chemistry_Course.html. This podcast goes through the steps necessary to do well in any college course.

I also you to utilize the Tutorial Center to get extra help. If you are having other personal issues, i encourage you to utilize the Counseling Center. They are trained professionals who can help with these issues.

I also highly yoy print the lecture notes of before coming to class (http://web.me.com/hmoody/Chemistry/Chem1211Klect.html) then annotate the notes to highlight points.

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Notice - First Test! - Notice

The first test for Chem 1211K will be on Sep 14 (TR) and 15 (MW). The test will cover Chapter 1-3 and Nomenclature.

You will need a Scantron and your Note Card for the test. I will provide the test and a Periodic Table.

Several sources of study are available to help you prepare. We have Problem Sets on the Web Site; podcasts; handouts; and the Textbook Companion Web Site and related tests.

The test will be 20 questions multiple-choice. The test is difficult. Study very hard to ensure you get off to a good start in this course.

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Citing Handbook of Chemistry and Physics

Book (with an editor, when part of book is cited):

Book Title, edition; Editor; Publisher: Place of publication, year, Chapter or inclusive page numbers (unless the entire book is being cited).

Example: CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics, 90th Edition, David R. Lide, ed., CRC Press/Taylor and Francis, Boca Raton, FL, 2003; p 83.

Monday, August 30, 2010

Safety Lab and Literature Exercise

In today's lecture we covered the Safety Lab and the Literature Exercise. The Safety Quiz and Literature Exercise Report is due at the beginning of our next lab.

We also continued covering Chapter 2.

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Lab Notice

The Safety/Literature Lab will be Monday during the class period. We will not have lab at the 2:00pm time slot.

Chapter 2

This week we began Chapter 2. Before you begin Chapter 3, it is essential that you be able to convert between atoms/moles/grams.

1 mole = 6.02 x 10^23 atoms/molecules/ions

MW: 1 mole = molar weight, For example, 1 mole NaCl = 58.44g

Chapter 1 Hints!

As you study Sections 1.8 through 1.14, you will develop skills that you will need to further understand chemistry. Do not just learn to go through the motions in a way to work a certain kind of question. Instead, keep in mind why you are approaching a problem in a particular way. Develop a reasoning strategy. Develop a plan on how to solve the problem. Then develop the detailed solution. look at a problem to determine what is being asked for and then develop your plan for solving the problem.

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

First Day of Class for Fall Semester

Check back here for class announcements and information, including answers to questions I get via email. If you really want to dig in, you can check out the website at http://www.highlands.edu/chemistry.

The first day of class for the Fall Semester is August 18, 2010. In the first class meeting we will cover the syllabus, web site, and begin Chapter 1.
I'm looking forward to an exciting and fast-paced summer.
Don't forget that the lecture notes are posted at http://web.me.com/hmoody/Chemistry/Chem1211Klect.html. To enhance your learning experience, I highly recommend that you print the lecture notes before coming to class. Otherwise you will have difficulty keeping up.

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Chapter 2 Essential Information

It is essential that you be able to convert between atoms/moles/grams/.
1 mole = 6.02 x 10^23 atoms/molecules/ions
MW: 1 mole = molar weight, For example, 1 mole NaCl = 58.44g

Chapter 1 Hints

As you study Sections 1.8 through 1.14, you will develop skills that you will need to further understand chemistry. Do not just learn to go through the motions in a way to work a certain kind of question. Instead, keep in mind why you are approaching a problem in a particular way. Develop a reasoning strategy. Develop a plan on how to solve the problem. Then develop the detailed solution. look at a problem to determine what is being asked for and then develop your plan for solving the problem.

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

First Day of Class for Summer 2010 Term

Check back here for class announcements and information, including answers to questions I get via email. If you really want to dig in, you can check out the website at http://www.highlands.edu/chemistry.

The first day of class for the Summer Term is June 7, 2010. Class starts at 8:30 am. In the first class meeting we will cover the syllabus, web site, and Chapter 1.
I'm looking forward to an exciting and fast-paced summer.
Don't forget that the lecture notes are posted at http://web.me.com/hmoody/Chemistry/Chem1211Klect.html. To enhance your learning experience, I highly recommend that you print the lecture notes before coming to class. Otherwise you will have difficulty keeping up.

Thursday, April 22, 2010

Last Full Week of Classes

Next week, April 26-29, is the last full week of classes.

Make-up tests for Chem 1211K will be at 2:00pm on Monday and Tuesday.

Make-up tests for Chem 1212K will be at 2:00pm on Tuesday.

All make-up tests will be given in my office, W341.

The Make-up tests last from 2:00-3:15pm.

Study hard and improve that grade.




Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Make-Up Tests

If you missed a test and are going to take a Make-Up test, you will
not need a scantron.

Good luck.

Test 4 Chapter 10, 11, & 12

Our last test covering Chapter 10-12 will be on April 28 & 29.

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Make-Up Test

The Make-Up Test will be scheduled on April 26 & 27 (Monday & Tuesday) from 2:00-3:15. If you intend to make-up a test, please notify me at least one week earlier.


Good luck!

Sunday, April 11, 2010

Office Hours

We will have our last labs this week. Therefore, I will be in my office from 2:00-3:00 pm on Mondays, Tuesdays, and Wednesdays (Wednesdays will begin next week).

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

New Element Discovered


NYT: Scientists discover heavy new element
SINEM
Element 117 has been a blank space on the periodic table, known by the placeholder name "ununseptium."

A team of Russian and American scientists has discovered a new element that has long stood as a missing link among the heaviest bits of atomic matter ever produced. The element, still nameless, appears to point the way toward a brew of still more massive elements with chemical properties no one can predict.

The team produced six atoms of the element by smashing together isotopes of calcium and a radioactive element called berkelium in a particle accelerator about 75 miles north of Moscow on the Volga River, according to a paper that has been accepted for publication at the journal Physical Review Letters.

Data collected by the team seem to support what theorists have long suspected but so far failed to prove: that as newly created elements become heavier and heavier they will eventually become much more stable and longer-lived than the fleeting bits of artificially produced matter seen so far.

If the trend continues toward a theorized "island of stability" at higher masses, said Dawn Shaughnessy, a chemist at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California who is a member of the team, the work could generate an array of strange new materials with as yet unimagined scientific and practical uses.

By scientific custom, if the latest discovery is confirmed elsewhere, the element will receive an official name and take its place in the periodic table of the elements, the checkerboard that begins with hydrogen, helium and lithium and hangs on the walls of science classrooms and research labs the world over.

"For a chemist, it's so fundamentally cool" to fill a square in that table, Dr. Shaughnessy said.

What's in a name?
Dr. Shaughnessy was, however, much less forthcoming about what the element might eventually be called. A name based on a laboratory or someone involved in the discovery is considered one of the highest honors in science. Berkelium, for example, was first synthesized at the University of California at Berkeley.

"We've never discussed names because it's sort of like bad karma," Dr. Shaughnessy said. "It's like talking about a no hitter during the no hitter. We've never spoken of it aloud."

Other researchers were equally circumspect, even when invited to suggest a whimsical, temporary moniker for the element. "Naming elements is a serious question, in fact," Yuri Oganessian, a nuclear physicist at the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research in Dubna, Russia, said in an e-mail message. "This takes years," said Dr. Oganessian, who is the lead author on the paper.

Various aspects of the work were undertaken at the particle accelerator in Dubna; the Livermore lab; Oak Ridge National Laboratory and Vanderbilt University in Tennessee; theUniversity of Nevada at Las Vegas; and the Research Institute of Atomic Reactors in Dimitrovgrad, Russia.

For the moment, the discovery will be known as ununseptium, a very unwhimsical, latinate placeholder that refers to the element's atomic number, 117.

"I think they have an excellent convincing case for the first observation of element 117; most everything has fallen into line very well," said Walter Loveland, a professor of chemistry atOregon State University who is familiar with the work but was not involved in it.

Elements are assigned an atomic number according to the number of protons — comparatively heavy particles with a positive electric charge — in their nuclei. Hydrogen has one proton, helium has two, and uranium has 92, the most in any atom known to occur naturally. Various numbers of charge-free neutrons add to the nuclear mass of atoms but do not affect the atomic number.

Elements with briefer lifetimes
As researchers have artificially created heavier and heavier elements, those elements have had briefer and briefer lifetimes — the time it takes for unstable elements to decay by processes like spontaneous fission of the nucleus. Then, as the elements got still heavier, the lifetimes started climbing again, said Joseph Hamilton, a physicist at Vanderbilt on the team.

The reason may be that the elements are approaching a theorized "island of stability" at still higher masses, where the lifetimes could go from fractions of a second to days or even years, Dr. Hamilton said. He added that each new discovery was a crucial step toward that unknown region.

In recent years, scientists have created several new elements at the Dubna accelerator, called a cyclotron, by smacking calcium into targets containing heavier, radioactive elements that are rich in neutrons — a technique developed by Dr. Oganessian.

Because calcium contains 20 protons, simple math indicates that scientists would have to fire the calcium at something with 97 protons - berkelium — in order to produce ununseptium, element 117.

Berkelium happens to be mighty hard to come by, but a research nuclear reactor at Oak Ridge produced about 20 milligrams of highly purified berkelium and sent it to Russia, where the substance was bombarded for five months late last year and early this year.

An analysis of decay products from the accelerator indicated that the team had produced a scant six atoms of ununseptium. But that was enough to title the paper, which was reviewed by other scientists before acceptance, "Synthesis of a new element with atomic number Z=117."

That is about the closest thing to "Eureka!" that the dry conventions of scientific publication will allow. The new atoms and their decay products displayed the trend toward longer lifetimes seen in previous discoveries of such heavy elements. The largest atomic number so far created is 118, also at the Dubna accelerator.

Five of the six new atoms contained 176 neutrons to go with their 117 protons, while one atom contained 177 neutrons, said Jim Roberto, a physicist at Oak Ridge on the project.

Atomic nuclei can be thought of as concentric shells of protons and neutrons. The most stable nuclei occur when the outermost shells are filled. Some theories predict that this will happen with 184 neutrons and either 120 or 126 protons: the presumed center of the island of stability.

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Class for Mar 25 Cancelled

I am cancelling class on Mar 25 at 9:30 and 11:00. I am sorry for any
inconvenience.

Harvey Moody

Test 3 Chapters 7 & 8

The test covering Chapters 7 & 8 will be on April 5 & 6. Good luck.

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Spring Break

Spring Break is the week of March 15. Enjoy the time off. If you are behind in some study areas, it is a prime time to get caught up.

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Lab Cancelled for Week of March 22

The Acid-Base Titration lab scheduled for Mar 22 & 25 is cancelled. The lectures will be held as usual.

Monday, March 8, 2010

Important Notice

The Chem 1211K lecture for Mar 9 is cancelled. If you need to find out
your grade before Mid-Term, you can come to the lab at 2:00 pm.

I am sorry for the last minute notice.

Harvey Moody

Class Cancelled

Class is cancelled for Wednesday, March 10.

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Heaviest Element named

The heaviest element yet known is now officially named "Copernicium," after the astronomer Nicolaus Copernicus. Copernicium has the atomic number 112 — this number denotes the number of protons in the nucleus of an atom. It is 277 times heavier than hydrogen, making it the heaviest element officially recognized by international union for chemistry IUPAC.

Monday, February 22, 2010

Test #2 Chapter 4, 5, and 6

This week on Monday and Tuesday we began Chapter 6. Our next test, Test #2, will be on March 3 and 4. We have covered Atomic Structure, Chemical Periodicity, and Chemical Reactions.

Don't forget to bring a Scantron.

Thursday, February 18, 2010

Effective Nuclear Charge


The effective nuclear charge, is the net positive charge experienced by an electron in a multi-electron atom. The term "effective" is used because the shielding effect of negative electrons prevents higher orbital electrons from experiencing the full nuclear charge. It is possible to determine the strength of the nuclear charge by looking at the oxidation number of the atom.
In an atom with many electrons the outer electrons are simultaneously attracted to the positive nucleus and repelled by the negatively charged electrons. The effective nuclear charge on such an electron is given by the following equation:
Zeff = Z − S
where
Z is the number of protons in the nucleus (atomic number)
S is the average number of electrons between the nucleus and the electron in question (the number of nonvalence electrons).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Effective_nuclear_charge

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Atomic Structure

We've been talking about quantum chemistry including the nature of light and radiation. This is so we can look at electrons a little more closely and understand their behavior as particles with wave-like character. A direct result of this wave-like character is that electrons exist in regions of space that are called orbitals. Understanding orbitals helps us interpret the chemistry that we have seen and allows us to predict various properties of atoms, ions and molecules.


This video may help http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M2wDLePcCQU.

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Atomic Structure

Last week we began our study of Atomic Structure. We covered the discovery of the electron, proton, and neutron; the nucleotide symbol, isotopes, and average atomic mass. Then we began our study of Electromagnetic Radiation.

Stoichionetry Hint!!!

For any stoichiometry problems, there are a logical set of steps to follow:
1. Balance the equation.
2. Convert the quantity you know into mols.
3. Convert mols of what you know to "mols of interest" using the coefficients (ratios) in the balanced equation.
4. Convert "mols of interest" into a useful number. That useful number might be a mass or a volume or a number of other things, it all depends upon the problem.

Monday, February 8, 2010

Test #1

Don't forget to bring a Scantron to the test.

Friday, February 5, 2010

Notice!!! New Location for General Chemistry (CHEM 1212K) Blog

Please note, a new address for General Chemistry (CHEM 1212K) is located at: http://ghcchem2.blogspot.com/.

The CHEM 1211K site will remain at the current location.

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Chem 1211K and 1212K Test #1

Both the Chem 1211K and 1212K tests will have 20 multiple-choice questions.

I will give you a periodic table.

You may use one 3" x 5" index card with anything you would like written by hand.

Good luck. let's get off to a great start. Study, study, study!!!!!

Sunday, January 31, 2010

Chem 1211K Lab Measurement and Density

Don't forget to turn in the Safety Quiz and the Measurement and Density Pre-Lab Quiz at the beginning of lab this week (Feb 1 and 4).

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Chem 1211K and 1212K Test #1

The first test for Chem 1211K will be on Feb 8 and 9. The test will cover Chapter 1-3 and Nomenclature.

The first test for Chem 1212K will be on Feb 9. The test will cover Chapter 13-14.

Monday, January 25, 2010

CHEM 1211K Chapter 2 Essential Information

This week we will finish Chapter 2 and begin Chapter 3. Before you begin Chapter 3, it is essential that you be able to convert between atoms/moles/grams.

1 mole = 6.02 x 10^23 atoms/molecules/ions

MW: 1 mole = molar weight, For example, 1 mole NaCl = 58.44g

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Chem 1211K and 1212K Labs

For the week of Jan 25, the Safety Labs will consist a discussion in the classroom during the regularly scheduled lecture period. Attendance in the lab will not be required.

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Lecture Notes

Don't forget that the lecture notes are posted at http://www.highlands.edu/academics/divisions/scipe/chemistry/Site/Chem1211Klect.html.

To enhance your learning experience, I highly recommend that you print the lecture notes before coming to class. Otherwise you will have difficulty keeping up. The notes are printed four per page with room to leave written comments.

Good luck.

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Reminder!

This Blog will be used for both CHEM 1211K and CHEM 1212K.

Monday, January 11, 2010

First Day of Class

The semester has started!!

Today in class we looked at the syllabus and web site.

I'm looking forward to an exciting semester.