CHEM 1220 - Sp23
CLASS NOTES and CORRECTIONS
Last Modified: Wednesday, 19-Apr-2023 17:18:44 EDT
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Class Notes:
- Review: Chapters 1 (1.5, 1.6), 2 (2.6-2.8),
3 (3.5), 4 (4.1, 4.3, 4.5-4.6), 5, 7 (7.6), 8 (8.2-8.8), 9 (9.1-9.3, 9.7-9.8), 11 (11.1-11.6)
material about the types of solids are most important to Chem 1220. For solids you should understand the 4
general types of solids and what attractive forces are present between the particles.
There's a link of a summary table of the four general types of solids, properties and examples of each.
"Types of Solids and Their Properties" (right above the Ch 13 notes link).
You don't have to worry about unit cells or unit cell calculations for solids from Ch 12.
I also have videos on Carmen covering this material (see the "Lecture Videos - pre-recorded"
submodule in the Lecture module).
- Chapter 11/12 - Liquids (& Solids) - pp. 1-18
- Chapter 11/12 - Liquids (& Solids) - pp. 19-33
- Chapter 11/12 - Liquids (& Solids) - pp. 34-45
- There are some things you will need to know about attractive forces and solids. This
was covered in 1210. You will need to review these things.
- In the 15th edition there is still some information about solids
in chapter 11 but the bulk of the information on solids has been moved to chapter 12.
You do not need to understand liquid crystals (section 11.7).
To make things easier I've included some links to the material you need to know about
solids from the 11th edition of the textbook. The first link is section 11.7 (pp.
458-460) covering Structures of Solids (skip unit cells and close packing of spheres)
and section 11.8 (pp. 464, 466-469) covering Bonding in Solids (and the corresponding
attractive forces). The second link is the end-of-chapter exercises for these two sections.
The third link below is a table summarizing the four types of solids, their properties and
the corresponding attractive forces.
- Here's links to material about solids from ch 11 of the 11th edition. We are not doing
anything about unit-cells. You need to know about the four different types of solids.
- Here's a link to my summary table of the types of solids, their att. forces, general properties, etc.,
- Chapter 13 - Solutions - pp. 1-35
- Chapter 13 - Solutions - pp. 36-78
- Chapter 14 - Chemical Kinetics - pp. 1-47
- Chapter 14 - Chemical Kinetics - pp. 48-73
- Chapter 15 - Chemical Equilibrium - pp. 1-28
- Chapter 15 - Chemical Equilibrium - pp. 29-52
- Chapter 16 - Acid-Base Equilibria - pp. 1-40
- Chapter 16 - Acid-Base Equilibria - pp. 41-74
- Chapter 17 - Additional Aspects of Aqueous Equilibria - pp. 1-50
- Chapter 17 - Additional Aspects of Aqueous Equilibria - pp. 51-112
- Chapter 19 - Chemical Thermodynamics
- Review Chapter 5 (particularly the material about state functions,
system and surroundings, enthalpy, enthalpy of formation, calc. of
enthalpy of rxn from Hfo values, Hess's law).
- Chapter 20 - Electrochemistry
- Chapter 23 - Transition Metals and Coordination Chemistry - pp. 1-24
- Chapter 23 - Transition Metals and Coordination Chemistry - pp. 25-63
- Chapter 23 - Transition Metals and Coordination Chemistry - pp. 64-91
- Chapter 23 - Transition Metals and Coordination Chemistry - pp. 92-114
- Chapter 21 - Nuclear Chemistry - pp. 1-28
- Chapter 21 - Nuclear Chemistry - pp. 29-54
- Chapter 18 - Chemistry of the Environment