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Instruction offered by members of the Department of Chemistry in the Faculty of Science.
Department Head - D.T. Cramb
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Graduate Courses
Advanced graduate-level courses are listed below. Courses in certain areas are grouped under "Selected Topics" titles. The content and offering of these are decided annually by the Department to meet the requirements of graduate students in the program. A student may receive credit for several courses in a given selected topics area. Details of offerings and course outlines may be obtained from the Department on request.
Unless stated otherwise the prerequisite for entry to all courses at the 600 level and above is "consent of the Department." Only where appropriate to a student's program may graduate credit be received for courses numbered 500-599.
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Chemistry
601
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Research Seminar
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Reports on studies of the literature or of current research. Required of all graduate students in Chemistry.
Course Hours:
3 units; H(2S-0)
NOT INCLUDED IN GPA
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Chemistry
603
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Research Seminar
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Continuation of Chemistry 601.
Course Hours:
3 units; H(2S-0)
NOT INCLUDED IN GPA
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Chemistry
613
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Electrochemical Fundamentals and Methodologies
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Origin, significance, and thermodynamics of interfacial potential differences; structure of the double layer; basic principles of electron transfer at interfaces, Butler-Volmer equation; mass transport control of electro-chemical reactions; controlled potential methods as applied to electrode surface reactions and homogeneous reactions coupled to electron-transfer processes.
Course Hours:
3 units; H(3-0)
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Chemistry
615
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Analytical Separations
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Theory and practice of resolving mixtures into separate components for analysis. Basic theory; liquid-liquid extraction; high performance liquid chromatography; gas-liquid, open bed, ion exchange and exclusion chromatography; electrophoresis.
Course Hours:
3 units; H(3-0)
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Chemistry
617
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Advanced Analytical Chemistry
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Consideration of principles and equilibria pertaining to aqueous and nonaqueous neutralization, redox, complexation, precipitation and potentiometric methods employed in analyses. Statistical considerations of analytical data and analysis.
Course Hours:
3 units; H(3-0)
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Chemistry
619
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Selected Topics in Analytical Chemistry
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Topics of current interest such as: properties of synthetic polymer membranes, advanced instrumental methods, developments in chemical sensors, speciation studies, environmental analytical chemistry.
Course Hours:
3 units; H(3-0)
MAY BE REPEATED FOR CREDIT
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Chemistry
621
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Organometallic Chemistry
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A detailed discussion of structure, bonding and preparative methods in organometallic chemistry including the industrial and synthetic applications of organometallic compounds.
Course Hours:
3 units; H(3-0)
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Chemistry
623
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Chemistry of the Main Group Elements
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The chemistry of electron-deficient, electron-precise, and electron-rich rings, inorganic polymers, and organometallic compounds of the main group elements; applications of spectroscopic techniques; industrial uses. Seminars on recent research developments.
Course Hours:
3 units; H(3-0)
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Chemistry
627
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Theoretical Inorganic Chemistry
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Aspects of theoretical inorganic and organometallic chemistry including: quantitative and qualitative molecular orbital theory; the bonding and structure of molecules, clusters, and extended arrays; the fragments of organometallic species; orbital correlation diagrams in inorganic reactions; spectroscopic methods and their interpretation.
Course Hours:
3 units; H(3-0)
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Chemistry
629
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Selected Topics in Inorganic Chemistry
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Courses are offered to cover topics of current interest, such as bioinorganic chemistry, inorganic solution phenomena, and the inorganic chemistry of the solid state.
Course Hours:
3 units; H(3-0)
MAY BE REPEATED FOR CREDIT
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Chemistry
641
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Biochemical Toxicology
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An interdisciplinary course focused on the diverse biomolecular mechanisms by which organic (e.g. PCB’s) and inorganic pollutants (e.g. Cd, Hg, As) adversely affect cell function examined at multiple levels of organization, from molecules to whole animals. Topics include how natural toxins exert toxicity, how toxins/light generate free radicals within cells, how the speciation of metals in the environment affects their bioavailability/toxicity, and the toxicity mechanisms that lead to homeostatic dysfunction.
Course Hours:
3 units; H(3-0)
Antirequisite(s):
Students may not receive credit for both Chemistry 641 and 541.
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Chemistry
651
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Advanced Organic Stereochemistry
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Stereochemical principles in organic chemistry, including: geometry, bonding, symmetry, molecular isomerism, conformational analysis, asymmetric and stereocontrolled reactions.
Course Hours:
3 units; H(3-0)
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Chemistry
653
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Advanced Organic Spectroscopy
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Advanced spectroscopic techniques for the determination of complex organic structures. Emphasis will be on NMR methods, practical aspects of acquiring spectra, advanced interpretation and reporting spectral data.
Course Hours:
3 units; H(3-0)
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Chemistry
655
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Advanced Organic Synthesis
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A review of modern synthetic reactions and methods in the field of organic chemistry with emphasis on the recent literature.
Course Hours:
3 units; H(3-0)
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Chemistry
657
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Theoretical Organic Chemistry
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Theoretical principles of organic chemistry including stereochemistry, molecular orbital calculations, pericyclic processes (Woodward-Hoffmann rules), and PMO theory.
Course Hours:
3 units; H(3-0)
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Chemistry
659
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Selected Topics in Organic Chemistry
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Courses are offered in major branches of organic chemistry, including: carbohydrate chemistry, steroids and terpenoids, semiochemistry, heterocyclic chemistry, biosynthesis of secondary metabolites, as well as other topics of current interest.
Course Hours:
3 units; H(3-0)
MAY BE REPEATED FOR CREDIT
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Chemistry
669
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Selected Topics in Applied Chemistry
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Courses are offered in such topics as electrochemistry, industrial catalysis, chemistry of energy sources, colloid and surface chemistry and polymer chemistry.
Course Hours:
3 units; H(3-0)
MAY BE REPEATED FOR CREDIT
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Chemistry
681
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Crystallography
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A general introduction to X-ray analysis of single crystals. Topics include: Geometry of the crystalline state; diffraction of X-rays; Fourier synthesis; methods of structure solution; accuracy and precision of derived parameters.
Course Hours:
3 units; H(3-0)
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Chemistry
689
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Selected Topics in Physical Chemistry
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Courses are offered in such topics as dielectric properties, kinetics, molecular vibrations, fluorescence spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction.
Course Hours:
3 units; H(3-0)
MAY BE REPEATED FOR CREDIT
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Chemistry
701
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Independent Study
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Independent study not directly related to the student's thesis project normally under the direction of any chemistry faculty member. A course information sheet must be provided and a student report must be submitted on completion of the course.
Notes:
Multiple 701 courses can be offered in any one term, however individual students may take only one 701 course for credit in program.
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