2008-2009 General Catalog, California State University, Fresno.

You are in the official 2008-2009 General Catalog
for California State University, Fresno.


New section starts here.

Department of Chemistry

New section starts here.

COURSES


New section starts here.

Chemistry (CHEM)

CHEM 1A. General Chemistry 1A (5)
Prerequisites: high school chemistry; G.E. Foundation B4 (except for students with declared majors in the College of Science and Mathematics). CHEM 1A not open to students with credit in CHEM 1B. Fundamental principles of chemistry such as chemical bonding and structure; stoichiometry, thermochemistry, oxidation-reductions, and states of matter. G.E. Breadth B1. (3 lecture, 3 lab, and 2 activity hours)* (CAN CHEM 2) FS

CHEM 1B. General Chemistry 1B (5)
Prerequisite: CHEM 1A with a grade of C or better. Acid-base theory; chemical kinetics; equilibrium (acid-base, hydrolysis, and solubility); thermodynamics, electrochemistry; selected topics in nuclear chemistry, coordination chemistry, and/or chemistry of selected groups. (3 lecture, 6 lab hours)* (CAN CHEM 4) FS

CHEM 3A. Introductory General Chemistry (4)
Prerequisite: G.E. Foundation B4 (except for students with declared major in the College of Science and Mathematics). No credit for CHEM 3A after 1A. High school chemistry or CHEM 15R recommended. For applied science and nonscience majors. Composition of matter and physical and chemical changes; fundamental laws and principles; atomic and molecular structure; acid-base theory, redox and equilibria; qualitative and quantitative theory and techniques. G.E. Breadth B1.* FS

CHEM 3B. Introductory Organic and Biochemistry (3)
No credit for CHEM 3B to students with credit in 1B. Primarily for students in health-oriented professions; not a substitute for CHEM 8. Prerequisite: CHEM 3A. Introduction to the basic concepts of organic and biochemistry. Structure and behavior of organic and biological compounds, metabolism, and regulation. FS

CHEM 3BL. Introductory Organic and Biochemistry Laboratory (1)
Prerequisite: CHEM 3A. Corequisite: CHEM 3B. Introductory laboratory study of the properties and chemistry of carbon-containing compounds and biological molecules. (3 laboratory hours)

CHEM 8. Elementary Organic Chemistry (3)
Not open to chemistry majors. Recommended for students requiring a one- semester course in the field. Prerequisite: CHEM 1A or 3A. Lectures, discussions, and demonstrations of fundamental principles; structure and chemical behavior of organic compounds. FS

CHEM 10. Chemistry and Society (4)
Not open to students with credit in college chemistry; for nonscience majors. Prerequisite: G.E. Foundation B4 (except for students with declared major in the College of Science and Mathematics). The significance of chemical principles in contemporary society; benefits and hazards relative to areas such as energy, health, diet, environment, and agriculture. G.E. Breadth B1. (3 lecture, 2 lab hours)* FS

CHEM 15R. Preparation for Chemistry (2)
Prerequisite: one year of high school algebra. Recommended for students without high school chemistry who are interested in taking additional chemistry or science courses. Basic principles and concepts of chemistry with an emphasis on problem solving. Preparation for CHEM 1A and CHEM 3A. CR/NC grading only. Not applicable to baccalaureate degree requirements. FS

CHEM 102. Quantitative Analytical Chemistry (5)
For chemistry majors; recommended for other science majors. Prerequisites: CHEM 1B (with a grade of C or better) and 128A. Students with credit in a similar lower-division quantitative analysis course will receive only one additional unit of credit. Introduction to principles and methods of analytical chemistry. (3 lecture, 6 lab hours)* FS

CHEM 105. Quantitative Analysis Laboratory (4)
Not open to chemistry majors. Prerequisites: CHEM 1A (with a grade of C or better), or CHEM 3A (with a grade of B or better), or permission of instructor. Laboratory study of principles and methods of applied quantitative analysis. (2 lecture, 6 lab hours)* FS

CHEM 106. Analytical Measurements Laboratory (4)
Prerequisites: CHEM 102 (with a grade of C or better), 108 or 110A, or permission of instructor. Principles and methods of analytical measurements of organic and inorganic substances by instrumental and non-instrumental techniques. (2 lecture, 6 lab hours)* F

CHEM 108. Introductory Physical Chemistry (4)
Prerequisites: MATH 76 (MATH 77 strongly recommended), CHEM 8 or 128A, and PHYS 2A and 2B or 4A, 4AL, 4B, 4BL, and 4C. Basic treatment of gas laws, thermodynamics, phase equilibria, properties of solutions, kinetics, and spectroscopy. F

CHEM 109. Elementary Organic Chemistry Laboratory (3)
Not open to chemistry majors. Prerequisite: CHEM 8 or 128B or concurrently. Laboratory study of the carbon compounds with coordinating lectures. (1 lecture, 6 lab hours)* (Spring semester)

CHEM 110A-B. Physical Chemistry (3-3)
Prerequisites: MATH 77; CHEM 1B, 8 or 128A; CHEM 110A requires PHYS 4B; CHEM 110B requires PHYS 4C or permission of instructor. Mathematical treatment of the laws of thermodynamics, reaction kinetics, elementary statistical and quantum mechanics, properties of solutions, kinetic theory of gases, crystal structure, molecular structure, and nuclear chemistry. 110A- F; 110B- S

CHEM 111. Physical Chemistry Laboratory (3)
Prerequisite: CHEM 110B or concurrently, CHEM 102. May not be taken concurrently with 106. Techniques of physical measurements, error analysis and statistics; ultra- violet, infrared, and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy; dipole moments, viscosity, calorimetry, kinetics, phase diagrams, thermodynamic measurements, and report writing. (1 lecture, 6 lab hours) (Spring semester)* S

CHEM 123. Advanced Inorganic Chemistry (3)
Prerequisites: CHEM 1B, 102 and 110A (or concurrently). Treatment of ionic and covalent bonding, atomic structure, molecular structure, and reaction mechanisms. Introduction to visible and infrared spectroscopy of transition metal complexes, special topics. F

CHEM 124. Synthesis and Characterization (2)
Prerequisite: CHEM 123 or concurrently. Techniques of preparation to include high temperature reactions, vacuum line and glove box preps, nonaqueous syntheses, solid state reactions. Emphasis on structural characterizations using instrumental methods. (6 lab hours)* S

CHEM 125. Applied Analytical Techniques (3)
Prerequisites: CHEM 8 or 128A and CHEM 102 or 105. Analytical techniques and their applications in clinical, environmental, agricultural, forensic, and bioscience laboratories. (2 lecture, 3 lab hours)*

CHEM 127. Organic Problems (1)
Prerequisites: CHEM 8 or 128A; 128B concurrently. Designed to review organic chemistry, in particular for those students who have taken only a brief course in organic chemistry. CR/NC grading only; not applicable to the requirements of a major in chemistry.

CHEM 128A-B. Organic Chemistry (3-3)
For chemistry majors; recommended for premedical students and other science majors. CHEM 128A not open for credit to students with credit in CHEM 8. Prerequisites: CHEM 1B with a grade of C or better or permission of instructor; for CHEM 128B: CHEM 128A with a grade of C or better. Introduction to structure and reactivity of principal classes of organic compounds with emphasis on theory and mechanism. FS

CHEM 129A-B. Organic Chemistry Laboratory (2-2)
Prerequisites or corequisites: CHEM 128A (for 129A); 128B and 129A (for 129B). Laboratory study of the methods, techniques, syntheses, and instrumentation or representative classes of organic compounds; introduction to research techniques by way of independent projects; introduction to qualitative organic analysis. (6 lab hours)* FS

CHEM 140T. Topics in Chemistry
(1-4; max total 6 if no area repeated)

Prerequisite: permission of instructor. Seminar covering special topics in one of the areas of chemistry: analytical, biochemistry, inorganic, organic, physical. Some topics may have a laboratory. FS

CHEM 150. General Biochemistry (3)
Prerequisite: CHEM 8. (CHEM 150 and 153 together constitute a year sequence.) Chemistry and metabolism of basic cellular constituents including carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, and nucleic acids. FS

CHEM 153. Physiological Chemistry and Metabolism (3)
Prerequisite: CHEM 150 or 155. Continuation of CHEM 150 or 155. Intensive discussion of the degradation and biosynthesis of major cellular constituents; energy metabolism; control of metabolic processes and pathological implications in mammalian systems. (Spring semester) S

CHEM 155. Fundamentals of Biochemistry (3)
Primarily for chemistry majors; recommended for premedical students and graduate students in the sciences. Prerequisites: CHEM 102 or 105, 109 or 129A, 128B. (CHEM 155 and 153 together constitute a year sequence.) Structure, function, and metabolism of chemical entities in living systems. (Fall semester) F

CHEM 156. Biochemical Laboratory Techniques (3)
Prerequisites: senior standing or permission of instructor; CHEM 150 or 155 (or concurrently), 102 or 105, 109 or 129A. Provides the student with a range of techniques and methodology appropriate to the study or phenomena at the biochemical, cellular, and organismic levels. Satisfies the senior major requirement for the B.A. in Chemistry. (1 lecture, 6 lab hours) (Spring semester)* S

CHEM 160. Research Techniques (3)
Concepts in the design of experiments. Development of practical research skills through the planning and undertaking of a short laboratory project. Satisfies the senior major requirement for the B.S. in Chemistry. (1 lecture, 6 lab hours)*

CHEM 170. Chemistry in the Marketplace (3)
Not open to chemistry majors. Prerequisites: G.E. Foundation and Breadth Area B. The impact of chemistry and chemicals on society and individual lives. G.E. Integration IB. (3 lecture hours) FS

CHEM 190. Independent Study (1-3; max total 6)
Prerequisite: permission of instructor. See Academic Placement -- Independent Study. Approved for RP grading. FS

New section starts here.

GRADUATE COURSES

(See Catalog Numbering System.)


Chemistry (CHEM)

CHEM 201. Chemistry Laboratory Teaching Techniques (1)

Laboratory safety, lab lecture techniques, equipment setups, grading, etc. Primarily for teaching assistants in chemistry.

CHEM 207. Radiotracer Methodology in the Natural Sciences (3)
(Same as BIOL 207 and PHYS 207.)
See BIOL 207 for course description.

CHEM 211. Chemical Thermodynamics (3)
Prerequisites: CHEM 110A, 110B, 111. Principles of thermodynamics; application to chemical problems; introduction to statistical methods, calculation of thermody namic functions from spectroscopic data.

CHEM 215. Quantum Chemistry (3)
Prerequisite: graduate standing. Seminar on recent advances in quantum mechanics; chemical bonding, and atomic and molecular spectroscopy.

CHEM 220. Theoretical Inorganic Chemistry (3)
Prerequisites: CHEM 110A, 110B, 123. Seminar on theoretical inorganic chemistry emphasizing structure and bonding of inorganic and coordination compounds, valence bond, molecular orbital and ligand field theories; correlation of structure and reactivity.

CHEM 222. Advances in Inorganic Chemistry (3)
Prerequisites: CHEM 110A, 110B, 123, 128B. Seminar on recent advances in inorganic chemistry. Topics may include, but are not limited to, organometallic chemistry, solid-state chemistry, nonmetallic complexes, and the chemistry of rare-earth compounds.

CHEM 225. Separation Methods in Chemistry (1-3)
Prerequisites: CHEM 106 and 129B. Seminar on the theory, application, and literature of various separation methods for organic and inorganic analysis. May include laboratory.

CHEM 226. Electrochemistry (1-3)
Prerequisite: CHEM 106. Seminar on the theory, application, recent developments, and literature of electrochemistry and electrochemical methods of organic and inorganic analysis. May include laboratory.

CHEM 227. Analytical Spectroscopy (1-3)
Prerequisites: CHEM 106, 110A, 110B, or permission of instructor. Theory, instrumentation, and application. Recent developments and literature of spectroscopic techniques. May include laboratory.

CHEM 228. Mass Spectrometry (1-3)
Prerequisites: CHEM 106 or 125, 128B, 108 or 110A and 110B, or permission of instructor. Seminar on the theory and application of mass spectrometry techniques to chemical analysis and identification. May include laboratory.

CHEM 230. Advanced Organic Chemistry (3)
Prerequisites: CHEM 128B, 129B. Seminar on recent advances in organic chemistry including reaction mechanisms and synthetic applications with references to current literature.

CHEM 235. Physical Organic Chemistry (3)
Prerequisites: CHEM 110A, 110B, 128B. Seminar in application of modern theoretical concepts to the chemical and physical properties of organic compounds.

CHEM 240T. Topics in Advanced Chemistry (1-3)
Seminar covering special topics in one of the areas of chemistry: analytical, biochemistry, inorganic, organic, physical. Some topics may have a laboratory.

CHEM 241A-B. Molecular Biology I-II (3-3)
(Same as BIOL 241A-B.) Prerequisites: BIOL 102,103, CHEM 150 or 155, or permission of instructor. BIOL/CHEM 241A is prerequisite for BIOL/CHEM 241B. Current topics in molecular biology are addressed, including protein and nucleic acid structure, DNA replication, transcription, translation, prokaryotic and eukaryotic regulation, mechanisms of exchange of genetic material, and recombinant DNA technology.

CHEM 242. Techniques in Protein Purification and Analysis (3)
(See BIOL 242.)

CHEM 243. Nucleic Acid Technology Lab (3)
(Same as BIOL 243.) Prerequisites: BIOL/CHEM 241A and 242. Corequisite: BIOL/CHEM 241B. A lecture/laboratory course focusing on the technologies used in nucleic acid chemistry; specifically, synthesis, translation, mutagenesis, and genetic engineering. (1 lecture, 6 lab hours)

CHEM 244. Cell Culture Techniques (3)
(See BIOL 244.)

CHEM 245. Industrial Biotechnology (3)
(See BIOL 245.)

CHEM 248. Seminar in Molecular Biology and Biotechnology (1-2; max total 4)
(Same as BIOL 248.) Prerequisite: admission into the biology or chemistry graduate program. Preference will be given to students enrolled in the Master of Biotechnology or Biotechnology Certificate programs. Reviews and reports on current literature in various aspects of biotechnology and molecular biology.

CHEM 250. Forensic Microscopy and Materials Analysis (3)
Prerequisites: graduate students only. Admission into MSFS program or permission of instructor. Forensic science methods for analysis of inorganic evidentiary materials, including composition and comparison of trace and impression evidence and their interpretation and significance. (2 lecture, 2 activity hours)

CHEM 251. Forensic Drug Chemistry and Toxicology (3)
Prerequisites: graduate students only. Admission into MSFS program or permission of instructor. Forensic science methods for analysis of controlled substances (in vivo or ex vivo) and their interpretation and significance. (2 lecture, 2 activity hours)

CHEM 252. Forensic Biochemistry (3)
Prerequisites: graduate students only. Admission into MSFS program or permission of instructor. Forensic science serological and molecular biological methods and their interpretation and significance.

CHEM 260. Advanced Research Techniques (3)
Prerequisites: classified standing or permission of the instructor. Advanced concepts in experimental design. Development of practical research expertise and communication skills through the planning, completion, and presentation (both written and oral) of a short laboratory project. (1 lecture, 6 lab hours)

CHEM 280. Seminar in Chemistry (1; max total 3)
Approved for RP grading.

CHEM 282. Forensic Science Seminar (1-1; max total 2)
Prerequisites: graduate students only. Admission into MSFS program or permission of instructor. Discussion and presentation of current topics and literature in forensic science.

CHEM 290. Independent Study (1-3; max total 6)
See Academic Placement -- Independent Study. Approved for RP grading.

CHEM 291. Internship in Science Laboratory (3)
Prerequisites: graduate students only. Admission into MSFS program or permission of instructor. Minimum of 150 hours research internship. May be completed at any public crime laboratory or facility approved by program coordinator. (Current employees of public crime laboratories may take CHEM 290 instead of CHEM 291 - must pass required agency background investigation.)

CHEM 295. Research (2)
Prerequisite: permission of instructor. Independent investigations of an advanced character for the graduate student with adequate preparation. Approved for RP grading. (May include conferences, laboratory, library.)

CHEM 298. Project (4)
Prerequisites: See Criteria for Thesis and Project. Preparation, completion, and submission of an acceptable project for the master's degree. Approved for RP grading.

CHEM 299. Thesis (4)
Prerequisite: See Criteria for Thesis and Project. Preparation, completion, and submission of an acceptable thesis for the master's degree. Approved for RP grading.

________

* In all lab courses, the wearing of approved safety glasses is mandatary.

New section starts here.

IN-SERVICE COURSES

(See Catalog Numbering System.)

Chemistry (CHEM)

CHEM 340T. Topics in Chemistry (1-3)
A professional development seminar covering special topics in one of the areas chemistry: analytical, biochemistry, forensic, inorganic, organic, physical. Some topics may have a laboratory or activity component.


 

Link to Chemistry Degrees.Chemistry Degrees

Link to Department Page.Department Page

Link to Courses Menu.Courses Menu

Link to Home.Home