Duration
30h Th
Number of credits
| Master MSc. in Chemical and Materials Science Engineering, professional focus in Chemical Engineering | 3 crédits |
Lecturer
Language(s) of instruction
French language
Organisation and examination
Teaching in the first semester, review in January
Schedule
Units courses prerequisite and corequisite
Prerequisite or corequisite units are presented within each program
Learning unit contents
Introduction to mass spectrometry and hyphenated techniques GC-MS and LC-MS
Spectral methods of analysis. General devices: sources of light, dispersive systems and FourierTransform systems, detectors. Emission spectrometry: flame, ICP and ICP-MS. Atomic absorption. Molecular, UV-Visible and middle Infra-red absorption and Raman scattering. Comparison and application of the various methods.
Learning outcomes of the learning unit
To present in details the most common analytical methods in mass spectrometry and spectroscopy based on physico-chemical processes. The main aspect developed is the quantitative aspect with an introduction to Quality Assurance. This course does not cover NMR analysis, which is covered in other courses.
Prerequisite knowledge and skills
Good knowledge of the basic concepts of atomic and molecular spectroscopy.
Planned learning activities and teaching methods
See here below
Mode of delivery (face to face, distance learning, hybrid learning)
Face-to-face course
Further information:
Face-to-face course
Additional information:
Theoretical courses (15h): 1st quadrimester. Face to face. Copies of lecture slides are available. Short movies of analytical methods have been recorded and are available on the plateform e-campus. A selection of analytical methods (GC-MS, ATR-FT-IR, Raman) are directly showed in live during the course to illustrate the theoritical concepts.
The rehearsals concerns certain parts of the theoretical course, illustrated by exercises. The subject covered during the rehearsals is mainly electrochemistry. Quantitative approaches by internal standard and isotope dilution are also discussed.
Course materials and recommended or required readings
Platform(s) used for course materials:
- eCampus
Further information:
- Course notes are available in 2 volumes: Introduction to Mass Spectrometry and Spectral Methods of Analysis. All volumes are available from University Press.
- In addition, the course is presented through a powerpoint available to students on e-campus
Full notes were written and are available for the spectral methods of analysis. They present the basic concepts which will be exposed.
- Moreover, the course is presented via a powerpoint provided to the students.
The students can obtain additional information, in particular in the excellent book : CHIMIE ANALYTIQUE (En français), SKOOG, WEST et HOLLER , DeBoeck Université, 3me édition (2015)
Exam(s) in session
Any session
- In-person
written exam AND oral exam
Written work / report
Out-of-session test(s)
Further information:
Further information:
Additional information:
The assessment includes:
1) An examination on the practical work (written examination, out of session, in December) and an oral presentation of the manipulation based on a scientific article (in groups of two, out of session in December). The reports of the practical work to be handed in from week to week.
2) The January face-to-face examination is divided into two parts,
Part 1 (written, duration 3h00) corresponds to a written exam with exercises and theoretical questions on electrochemistry-related material;
Part 2 (oral) corresponds to an oral examination on the mass spectrometry AND spectroscopy (UV, VIS, IR)
The full grading scheme is distributed as follows:
- The January/August examination:
- a written examination on electrochemistry accounts for 30% of the final grade.
- an oral examination covers physico-chemical methods of analysis and contributes 40% to the final grade, with 25% for spectroscopy and 15% for mass spectrometry.
- Practical work: all lab reports, the off-session exam, and the oral presentation of the experiment account for 30%. There is no reassessment of the practical work between the two sessions. The practical work grade is automatically carried over to August in case of an overall failure in January. The practical work also contributes 30% to the final grade in the second session."
The principle of the absorbing threshold grade will be applied: a minimum score of 8/20 must be obtained in each of the three parts in order for the weighted average (according to the percentages given above) to be applied for the calculation of the final grade. If the score of at least one part of the evaluation is less than or equal to 7/20, the overall grade will be absorbed by this major failing mark.
In the case of final failure (overall mark below 10/20), from one year to the next, students who have passed the practical work with a minimum of 10/20 will be exempted from it.
Work placement(s)
No practical work is included in this version of the course.
Organisational remarks and main changes to the course
Contacts
Pr. Gauthier Eppe
Institut de Chimie, Bat B6c, Local 1/9A
Tel. +32-4-366.3422
e-mail. g.eppe@uliege.be
Assistant TP : Aurélie Rensonnet : aurelie.rensonnet@uliege.be
Assistant TD Electrochemistry : Maxime Kolkman : maxime.kolkman@uliege.be
Préparateur : Stéphane Luts