GENERAL AND INORGANIC CHEMISTRY I AND LAB EXPERIENCES 1
Module Module 2

Academic Year 2024/2025 - Teacher: ALESSANDRO D'URSO

Expected Learning Outcomes

The course aims to provide the fundamentals of stoichiometry and chemical calculation, in order to allow the student to become familiar and mastered with the chemical problems that will be the

subject of the final written exam. This second teaching module, in concert with the first theory module, aims to provide the student with the tools for understanding chemical reactivity in relation

to inorganic and basic chemistry, the processes associated with it, and the stoichiometric calculations necessary for the resolution of specific problems. At the end of the course the student

will have acquired and matured the essential skills to face and solve questions relating to calculations on moles, concentrations of solutions and balancing of chemical reactions. He will also

have learned the nomenclature of inorganic compounds and will be able to carry out exercises involving basic general chemistry concepts such as those relating to colligative properties,

thermochemical reactions and gas laws. Laboratory exercises will be carried out to reinforce the concepts addressed in the classroom and to introduce the student in a practical way to a chemical

laboratory. The student will learn to organize and carry out a chemical experiment and to use glassware and some simple laboratory tools. In addition, some basic knowledge relating to the

correct disposal of chemicals as well as some basic notions on data processing will be imparted. All these notions will serve for the understanding of the subsequent courses, to which the subject is

preparatory. The student, through the study of chemistry and through laboratory activities, will become aware not only of the fundamental role played by this discipline in various scientifictechnological

fields, but will also acquire experience with the fundamental principles underlying the scientific method.

The aim of the course is to acquire the reasoning ability necessary to face the study of chemical phenomena with analytical and numerical methods (applying knowledge and understanding).

Specific educational objectives of this course are:

know the electronic configuration of the elements of the main groups and the nomenclature of the

main inorganic compounds;

knowing how to read and interpret all the information that can be deduced from the periodic table;

understand the mechanisms of chemical bond formation;

know the chemical interactions in solids, liquids and understand the state equations of gases;

know the behavior of the solutions, in terms of the balance of interaction forces and their effect on

the physical properties of the solutions;

know the main thermodynamic and kinetic quantities involved in chemical reactions;

evaluate the conditions of the chemical equilibrium;

acquire the ability to correctly set up and carry out exercises on the various types of chemical

reactions.

Furthermore, with reference to the so-called Dublin Descriptors, this course contributes to

acquiring the following transversal skills:

Knowledge and understanding: Inductive and deductive reasoning skills. Ability to schematize a

chemical reaction in qualitative and quantitative terms. Ability to set up a problem using

appropriate relationships between physico-chemical quantities and to solve it with analytical

methods.

Ability to apply knowledge: Ability to apply the knowledge acquired for the description of chemical

phenomena using rigorously the scientific method. Capacity for quantitative calculation of

reactants and products of chemical reactions.

Autonomy of judgment: Critical reasoning skills. Ability to identify the most suitable solutions to

solve chemical problems. Ability to identify the predictions of a theory or model. Ability to evaluate

the accuracy needed to be used in stoichiometric calculations.

Communication skills: Ability to describe a scientific topic in oral and written form, with properties

of language and terminological rigor, illustrating its motivations and results.

Course Structure

The course includes 66 hours in total. During the course there will be lectures on the preparatory topics for carrying out the exercises and the problems covered by the exam. In parallel, numerous classroom exercises will be carried out with simulation of problems and exercises completely similar to those that students will face in the final exam task. Finally, some (no more than 6) laboratory activities are scheduled during the course which will then have to be reported by the students and which will also constitute the subject of examination

Required Prerequisites

Basic mathematics, basic physics, basic chemistry. The chemistry course does not provide in-depth preliminary knowledge, however it will be necessary to follow the various topics from time to time and not fall behind in the study. Chemistry is a discipline that is built up gradually with regular and constant study during the course. It will be very difficult to prepare it by yourself at the end of the course because many topics need time to be well understood and matured. Students are strongly advised to take the zero courses in mathematics and chemistry which will be delivered at the start of the courses.

Attendance of Lessons

Attendance is a necessary requirement for passing the final exam. Only one absence from the laboratory is allowed during the whole semester. For those that makes more than one absence, will bo organized a practical exam in the laboratory before being able to access the oral test. If the course is taught in mixed or distance mode, the necessary changes may be introduced with respect to what was previously stated, in order to comply with the program envisaged and reported in the syllabus.

Detailed Course Content

EXERCISES ON:

1. ATOMS AND MOLECULES: Mole, molecular weight, minimum formula, percentages of elements present in compounds. Chemical nomenclature and external electronic configuration.

2. CHEMICAL EQUATIONS. BALANCE AND WEIGHT RELATIONS: Generalities on chemical equations, balancing of chemical equations, calculation of the number of oxidation, redox balance, the concept of acid and base, salts, oxidants, reducing agents, non-quantitative processes, reaction yield, limiting reagent.

3. GAS SYSTEMS: Definition of a gas system, volume, pressure and temperature, gas laws, density and determination of molecular mass, partial pressures and volumes, gas mixtures, degree of dissociation. Calculations on gas phase reactions. Exercises on the law of ideal and real gases and Graham's law.

4. SOLUTIONS - Calculation of the concentration of the solutions, mixing and dilution of the solutions, volumetric analysis, colligative properties of solutions and the effect of electrolytic dissociation.

5. CHEMICAL EQUILIBRIUM - Chemical equilibrium, equilibrium constants and their use in the calculation of the concentrations of species at equilibrium

6. THERMODYNAMICS - Enthalpy, specific heat, heat capacity, Hess's law, internal energy, entropy and free energy

7. CHEMICAL KINETICS - Factors affecting the reaction rate - Kinetic equation and order of reaction - Elementary reactions: step limiting the reaction rate - Activation energy - Catalysts -Arrhenius equation and collision theory

LABORATORY EXPERIENCES:

Determination of the molar volume of a Gas

Precipitation of a metal oxide and relative purification

Redissolution of copper oxides in diluted and concentrated acids

Atomic spectroscopy and flame assays

Thermochemistry

Chemical kinetics

Textbook Information

Stoichiometry and inorganic lab

1. Stoichiometry- B I Bhatt-S B Thakore

2. Chemical Reactions and Stoichiometry, R. K. Dave

Course Planning

 SubjectsText References
1ATOMI E MOLECOLEP. Michelin Lausarot, G.A. Vaglio, STECHIOMETRIA, Piccin
2EQUAZIONI CHIMICHE. BILANCIAMENTO E RELAZIONI PONDERALIP. Michelin Lausarot, G.A. Vaglio, STECHIOMETRIA, Piccin
3SISTEMI GASSOSIP. Michelin Lausarot, G.A. Vaglio, STECHIOMETRIA, Piccin
4SOLUZIONIP. Michelin Lausarot, G.A. Vaglio, STECHIOMETRIA, Piccin
5EQUILIBRIO CHIMICOP. Michelin Lausarot, G.A. Vaglio, STECHIOMETRIA, Piccin
6TERMODINAMICAP. Michelin Lausarot, G.A. Vaglio, STECHIOMETRIA, Piccin
7Cinetica ChimicaP. Michelin Lausarot, G.A. Vaglio, STECHIOMETRIA, Piccin

Learning Assessment

Learning Assessment Procedures

The exam consists of a written and an oral test on the topics covered in both modules of the subject. Both tests focus exclusively on the topics covered during the lessons. All types of exercises of the exams will be addressed during the course. The written exam consists of exercises and open questions. IT IS NOT POSSIBLE TO TAKE THE WRITTEN EXAMINATION IN A CALL DIFFERENT FROM THE ONE IN WHICH YOU WISH TO CARRY OUT THE ORAL EXAMINATION. The student must face the written exam with an already complete preparation of the whole subject. The minimum grade to pass the written test is 18/30. The correctness of the numerical results, the explanation of the procedures implemented to obtain them, the internal consistency between logically interdependent results and the rigor in the correct use of the units of measurement associated with the physical quantities used constitute evaluation elements of the written test. Evaluation criteria of the oral exam are the quantitative rigor in the demonstrations, the degree of depth of the arguments, the ability to establish links between different aspects of a chemical phenomenon. The acquisition of the contents of the laboratory experiences is evaluated on the basis of correctness, completeness, conciseness and expression properties in the drafting of the reports and in the oral exam. The verification of learning can also be carried out electronically, should the conditions require it.