CHEMISTRY 122, Winter 18 Sec. 01 INSTRUCTOR: Tom Schultz

OFFICE: SAM 421; Phone 206-516-3129 EMAIL:

*** Email is the best way to contact me. My office phone is shared with several other instructors, and the messages are not checked frequently.

OFFICE HOURS: 11:00-11:50 AM DAILY, or by appointment

PREREQUISITES: CHE 121, with 2.0 or better MATH 085, with 2.2 or better.

LECTURE: 12:00-12:50 AM DAILY, SAM 401

LABORATORY: Tuesday, SAM 403, 1:00-2:50PM

DISABILITIY ACCOMODATIONS:

Students with documented disabilities that need special accommodations, or require special arrangements for building evacuation, should contact the instructor within the first two weeks of class.

TEXTS:

Lecture: Bettelheim, Brown, Campbell, Farrell. Introduction to, Organic, and Biological Chemistry, 8th Ed., Thompson/Brooks Cole, 2013 - ISBN-13: 978-1-133-1097976-1

Laboratory Manual: Download from course web-site.

OPTIONAL TEXTS:

Bettelheim, Brown, Campbell, Farrell, Study Guide for, Introduction to Organic and Biochemistry y. A copy of this text is on reserve in the library.

CALCULATOR:

For exams and quizzes you need your own small non-programmable calculator, preferably with no batteries.

HOWMWORK:

Homework is a daily student responsibility, and is necessary to learn and fine tune problem solving skills. For the normal student, it is essential to work homework problems several times, and to randomly review these problems before each exam, or quiz. Before starting each homework assignment, the student should copy sample problems from the lecture notes on to a piece of notebook paper, and solve them. After working these problems, the student should compare their solution with the solution contained within the lecture notes, if this process generates questions, then they should be recorded and shared with the instructor as soon as possible. When this process is complete, the student should proceed to the homework assignment. The assigned homework, listed on the last page of this document, should be worked on a daily basis, with any questions, again recorded and shared with the instructor, at your earliest convince. Weekly homework assignments should be completed over at home, and any remaining questions asked during office hours before class. Homework assignments will be handed-in at the beginning of the lecture period on Monday, or Wednesday, as per the schedule on the following page. Since homework solutions will be posted after they are collected, late homework cannot be accepted. When the graded homework is returned, you should compare your assignment with the posted solutions, and again ask questions about the solutions if you have any. The entire assignment will not be completely graded, but rather a few random problems will be graded in detail, and the rest of the assignment checked for completeness, style, and effort. Style, refers to all work being clearly shown, with answers rounded to the correct precision, including units, and boxed.

QUIZZES

Quizzes will be given each week, except for week one, covering the homework from the previous week, the last thirty minutes, or so, of the period on Friday. Quiz make-ups will not be given.

EXAMINATIONS

Two midterms and a cumulative final examination will be given. See the lecture schedule for tentative dates. Midterm make-ups will not be given, but the score of the final exam might be substituted for the missing midterm score, if there is a valid excused absence.

LABORATORY

The assigned experiments are listed on the Tentative Weekly Schedule below. A written record for each experiment will be kept in a bound laboratory notebook. At the beginning of each lab, the instructor will inspect each lab book to be sure that it is up to date; including table of contents, page numbers, experiment titles, observations, and any other information as suggested in the experiment. When the lab work is completed, the laboratory notebook must be signed by the instructor prior to the student leaving. Each Monday a written report of the previous weeks experiment will be turned in to the instructor at the beginning of the period. Important notes and supplements will be found on the Science, Math, and Chemistry website (www.chemsccc.org). There will be no make-up laboratory sessions, since there is extensive set-up and preparation required by the laboratory staff. Only one missed laboratory experiment will be permitted in order to pass the class.

TENTATIVE WEEKLY SCHEDULE

Changes to this schedule will be announced in class.

DATE

/

Each day

/

Lab Wednesday

1-02

/ Lecture Ch#2, Alkanes /

No Lab First Week

1-08

/

Lecture Ch#3, Alkenes & Alkynes

*HW#2* Tuesday; Quiz Ch#1,2 Friday / Lab#1, Molecular Models

1-15

/

Monday, Jan. 15 No School

Lab #1 Due (Wednesday)

Lecture Ch4, Benzene and its Derivatives

*HW#3* due Tuesday *
Quiz Ch#3 Friday / Lab#2, Separation of Pigments

1-22

/

Lecture Ch5, Alcohols, Ethers, & Thiols

*HW#4 Due* Tuesday

Lab #2 Due (Wednesday); Quiz Ch#4 Friday

/ Lab#3, Simple Distillation

1-29

/ Lecture Ch6, Stereochemistry
Lab #3 Due (Wednesday)
*HW#5 Due (Tuesday)*
Midterm #1; Ch# 1-5 (Friday) / Lab#4, Fractional Distillation

2-05

/ Lecture Ch8, Amines
*HW#6 Due* Tuesday
Lab #4 Due (Wednesday); Quiz Ch#6 Friday /

Lab#7, Aspirin Synthesis

2-12

/ Lecture Ch9, Aldehydes and Ketones
Lab #7 Due (Wednesday)
*HW#8 Due* Tuesday
Quiz Ch#7 Amines Friday /

Lab#8, Aspirin Analysis

2-19

/ Monday, Feb. 16, No School Lecture Ch10, Carboxylic Acids
*HW#9 Due* Tuesday
Lab #4 Due (Wednesday);
Quiz Ch#8, Aldehydes/Ketones Friday / No school Monday

2-28

/ Lecture Ch11, Carboxylic Acid Derivatives
Lab #8 Due (Wednesday)
*HW#10 Due* Tuesday
Midterm #2, Ch# 6-10(Friday) /

Lab#11, Extraction of Caffeine

3-05

/

Lecture Ch12, Carbohydrates

*HW#11 Due* Tuesday
Lab #11 Due (Wednesday)
Quiz Ch#11, Acid Derivatives Friday /

Lab #10, TLC Analysis of Analgesic Drugs

3-12

/

Lecture Ch12, Carbohydrates

*HW#12 Due* Tuesday
Lab #10 Due (Wednesday); Quiz Ch#12, Carbos, Friday /

3-20

/

Final Exam Monday, March 19

1:00-3:00 PM /

IMPORTANT DATES TO REMEMBER

January 02, Winter quarter begins.

January 08, last day to withdraw with 100% refund(less $5)

January 16, last day to add/register, instructor permission required.

January 16, last day to change audit/credit status without instructor permission

January 16, last day to withdraw without a “W” appearing on transcript and without instructor permission.

January 19, last day to withdraw with 50% refund. Instructor permission required.

February 23, last day to withdraw (no refund) or change audit/credit status; instructor permission required.

March 21, Winter quarter ends.

GRADING SCHEME

The final grade will be calculated by the following distribution: Homework 15%,Quizzes 15%, Laboratory 15%, midterms 25%, and the final exam 30%. The following schedule will be used to assign grades, with class participation affecting borderline situations.

93% -100% 4.0

88% - 92% 3.5

83% - 87% 3.0

75% - 82% 2.5

73% - 77% 2.0

68% - 72% 1.5

63% - 67% 1.0

58% - 62% 0.5

CHEATING:

Any student involved in cheating will receive a zero; this includes pre lab and post lab work, which should be done by the individual student.

ASSIGNED HOMEWORK (See weekly schedule for due date)

Ch # Due Wk # Assigned Problems

2 T 2 14, 18, 19, 20, 22, 23, 26, 27, 32, 35, 40, 46, 48,59, 60,62.

3 T 3 15, 17, 18, 19, 20, 23, 27, 28, 32, 36, 37, 38, 42, 46, 48, 49 ,63, 67.

4 T 4 4, 6, 8, 10, 14, 16, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26, 38, 40..

5 T 5 10, 11, 13, 16, 19, 22, 24, 29, 37, 39, 40, 60, 62.

6 T 6 7, 9, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 22, 24, 28, 32, 34, 36.

8 T 7 10, 12, 16, 20, 22, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48.

9 T 8 14, 18, 20, 22, 26, 28, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50, 52, 54, 56, 58, 64, 66, 69.

10 T 9 6, 8, 16, 20, 24, 36, 38, 40, 44.

11 T 10 4, 6, 10, 12, 16, 18, 34, 36.

12 T 11 6, 8, 10, 14, 18, 22, 24, 26, 28, 36, 40, 42, 46, 48, 64, 72.