| CHIM0606-2 | |||||||||||
| Analytical Chemistry | |||||||||||
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Duration :
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| 20h Th, 15h Pr, 5d Labo. | |||||||||||
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Number of credits :
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Lecturer :
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| Gauthier Eppe | |||||||||||
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Language(s) of instruction :
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| French language | |||||||||||
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Organisation and examination :
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| Teaching in the first semester, review in January | |||||||||||
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Units courses prerequisite and corequisite :
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| Prerequisite or corequisite units are presented within each program | |||||||||||
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Learning unit contents :
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| During the 11 courses, the balanced reactions (acid-bases, redox, complexation, precipitation) are treated in terms of exchange of particles between donors and acceptors, thus unifying the concepts used in the study of the various reactions in aqueous solution. The next step consists in establishing a relationship between the variations of the conditional constants (acidity constants, formation constants of complex, normal potentials, exchange and partition constants) and the conditions of the medium (pH, ionic strength, complexing agent). These concepts being acquired, the implementation and the quantitative application of these various reactions with the purpose of analysis (titrimetry and gravimetry, primarily) are considered while insisting on accuracy which one should expect.
Laboratory Sessions: The first part of the laboratory sessions aims at teaching to students the basic experimental methods used in analytical chemistry. Emphasis will be mostly placed on quantitative methods, such as gravimetry and acid-base, complexometric, or redox titrations. The second part of the program is focused on more specialized techniques, such as colorimetry. It aims at teaching to students analysis methods commonly used in research or industrial laboratories. |
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Learning outcomes of the learning unit :
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| To present with some details, the most current methods of analysis, based on chemical processes. Within the framework of the chemical methods, the mainly developed aspect is quantitative analysis with an emphasis on the concept of precision, trueness and accuracy.
At the end of the practical works, students will be acquainted with the common basic techniques used in analytical laboratories. They will be able to analyze and to perform simple experimental procedures reported in the literature and to assess the significance of the results obtained. In addition, laboratory sessions in small groups will help the students to develop more general skills, such as team working, problem solving, finding information in the technical literature, critically analyzing experimental data, improving their oral and writing skills, etc. |
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Prerequisite knowledge and skills :
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| Good knowledge of the basic concepts of the course of generalchemistry | |||||||||||
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Planned learning activities and teaching methods :
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| Laboratory work:
Teams of two students perform a series of experiments with increasing complexity to get used to the basic techniques of analytical chemistry. Results are summarized in a report delivered at the end of the practical session. |
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Mode of delivery (face-to-face ; distance-learning) :
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| Theoretical course: 30 h during B3 Q1, R30 room building B6d;
Practical work: 15h given by C. Delvaux The rehearsals are important from several points of view: they illustrate the course and contribute to its understanding by a series of problems and exercises to solve.They give the opportunity to student to improve their understanding of the various calculation methods seen within the course: Acid-base titrations, complexometric titrations, oxydoreduction potentials, Pourbaix diagrams. |
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Recommended or required readings :
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| - Notes were written and are available for the whole course. - These notes are accompanied with a booklet of exercises.
The laboratory manual is available at the 'Presses Universitaires'. Each laboratory session should be prepared in advance using the laboratory manual and the lecture notes relative to the topic under study. Reference work: the students can obtain additional information, in particular in the excellent book: ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY by SKOOG, WEST and HOLLER, 3rd edition (2015) |
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Assessment methods and criteria :
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| Examination: The examination is a written exam. It involves mostly numerical exercises, a few theoretical questions directly from the course, and applications: interpretation or layout of titration curves, calculations of conditional constants, chromatogram analysis... The examination relies on the entirety of the course.
The first exam session is in January, the second is in August/September.
The evaluation of the laboratory sessions takes into account:
The laboratory evaluation contributes to 30% of the final grade |
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Work placement(s) :
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Organizational remarks :
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Contacts :
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| Pr. Gauthier Eppe
Institut de Chimie, Bat B6c, Local 1/9A
Tel. +32-4-366.3422
e-mail. g.eppe@ulg.ac.be
Person in charge of the exercise sessions Cédric Delvaux C.delvaux@ulg.ac.be Person in charge of the laboratory sessions: Dr. Céline Xhrouet Tel: (04) 366-2345 E-mail: c.xhrouet@ulg.ac.be Préparateur S. Luts |
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Items online :
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![]() | Chemical methods of analysis first part |
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