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Chem 216 Syllabus Fall 2017

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American University of Beirut

Faculty of Arts and Sciences


Department of Chemistry

Chemistry 216: Analytical Chemistry Lab (2 credits)


Course Syllabus

Fall 2017

Lecturer Lab Manager Lab Instructors


Dr. Antoine Ghauch
Mrs. Lara Abramian
Room 430 Chem. Ext. 3990 TBA
Room 203 Chem. Ext. 3977
ag23@aub.edu.lb
la30@aub.edu.lb
Office Hours: TR 12:30 -2:30 pm

CLASS SCHEDULE

Section CRN Lab Lectures for Lab Lectures for Lab Experiments
common experiments Rotational Experiments
(Regular Sessions) (Extra Sessions)
Wednesday
Wednesday September 6
1 10637 Monday 1:00 pm - 5:00 pm
Thursday September 7 Room 211
@ 1 pm
2:00 pm-2:50 pm
Chem101
Wednesday September 13 Thursday
Thursday September 14 1:00 pm - 5:00 pm
2 10638 Dr. A. Ghauch
@ 1 pm Room 211

Dr. A. Ghauch

TEXTBOOKS, READING MATERIALS AND RESSOURCES


Harris, Quantitative Chemical Analysis, 8th Edition (Mandatory).
Student Solutions Manual to accompany Harris.
Moodle Course ID: CHEM216_ag23
Chem216 Lab Manual

COURSE DETAILS
Lab Description:
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This lab course is designed to provide Chemistry students with the


experimental background for understanding the behaviors and properties of aqueous
solutions. The analytical chemistry approach encourages students to think and act more
independently when separation and identification of various mixtures is discussed. The main
goal is to lay the foundation for the students to observe, search for information, analyze and
develop their own analytical chemistry projects.

Lab Objectives:
A major objective of this lab course is to provide a strong background in those
chemical principles that are particularly important to analytical chemistry.
A second goal is to develop an appreciation for the difficult task of judging the
accuracy and precision of experimental data and to show how these judgments
can be sharpened by the application of statistical methods.
A third aim is to introduce a wide range of techniques that are useful in modern
analytical chemistry.
A fourth goal is to develop the skills needed to solve analytical problems in a quantitative
manner, particularly with the aid of the spreadsheet tools that are commonly available. A
final goal is to teach those laboratory skills that will give students confidence in their ability
to obtain high-quality analytical data.

Grading Scheme:
Reports 20%
Oral Quizzes during lab sessions 10%
Project (ICT in learning) 20%
Attendance and Participation 10%
Final Exam (Practical Exam) 40 %

* Exam dates:
Practical Final Exam November 29/30, 2017

GENARAL GUIDELINES
Policy on Attendance:
Attendance will be taken regularly every meeting. If you need to miss class for legitimate
reasons, or if you simply dont feel like coming, it is your responsibility to
know and understand what was covered. Ask a classmate for a copy of his
or her notes, drop by my office or visit the courses web-site (check your
Moodle continuously). We cannot take class time to review material for
students who were unable to attend class. Missing a class on a day
emphasizing participation is not a good idea.

Missing Exams:
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Absence from exams and/or the final exam is not allowed unless
under hindering circumstances.
In case of absence for reasons beyond control, a valid excuse should be submitted to your
Professor as soon as possible.
No make up exams will be given. If the excuse is accepted, a new grading scheme will
be decided upon for the course final grade calculations.
If two exams are missed, the student will be asked to withdraw from the course.
In case of absence from the final examination with a valid reason, a student is entitled to
a make-up final upon consent of the Professor and the Arts and Sciences Deans office.

Academic Integrity and Students Responsibility:

Dishonesty of any kind will not be tolerated in this course. Cheating is a violation of the
Universitys academic regulations and is subject to disciplinary action.
Cheating on exams and/or copying of assignments will result in a grade of zero for that
exam/assignment.
Students should familiarize themselves with the details of the Universitys Student Code-
of-Conduct as published in the annual Student Handbook.
During lectures students are expected to be quiet and well behaved. Students deemed to
be disruptive will be asked to leave.
Frequent observed misconduct in the classroom subjects the student to disciplinary action
and the loose of grades allocated to Attendance and Participation.
Students are held responsible for all announcements in class and on Moodle, whether
they are present or absent for that day.

Students with Special Needs:

If you have documented special needs and anticipate difficulties with the content or format of the
course due to a physical or learning disability, please contact me and/or your academic advisor,
as well as the Counseling Center in the Office of Student Affairs (Ext. 3196), as soon as possible to
discuss options for accommodations. Those seeking accommodations must submit the Special
Needs Support Request Form along with the required documentation.

Laboratory
Laboratory experiments are essential to the complete understanding of quantitative analysis
especially Chem215 and to introduce you to
Chem234 (Chemistry elective course). For
this part, we will meet once a week. One lab
lecture is scheduled on Monday @ 2:00 p.m.
(All sections). Two lab periods (experimental
work) are scheduled on Wednesday and
Thursday from 1 to 5 pm.

This course is time consuming: The time


required to successfully accomplish a lab
experiment is about 4-5 hours and the time
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needed to prepare the experiment before


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coming to the lab and after carrying out the experiments is also about 4-5 hours.
You will require a laboratory notebook / student to record measurements, experimental
conditions important observation, and any other significant information you collect during
the course of an analysis. The book should be permanently bound with consecutively
numbered pages. If your pages are not numbered, hand-number them before you make
entries.
The first pages of your notebook should be saved for a table of contents that you can update
as entries are made.

Thus, you will be graded on the way how you maintain your Lab Notebook. Your Notebook
must be checked by the Lab Instructor and signed by him/her at the end of every lab
session.
More information on the laboratory work and policy issues is included in the Lab Manual
which will be distributed before check-in in the first lab period. We often upgrade the
instrumentation and experiments in the lab so the Manual is always under revision.
Any requisite additions/replacements for sections of the Lab Manual will be distributed at
least a week before the given experiment is to be performed. If an error appears in the manual
lab, do not hesitate to inform the Professor, the TA or the Lab Instructors for corrections.

The Big Picture!


The lab experiments will be performed in two tracks of five rotational experiments. Those
will be preceded by laboratory lectures as per schedule developed in the next page.

Track 1 Experiments
Experiment # 6: Determination of the d-Limonene Content in Orange Rind Using Gas Chromatography1----
Notes for the Lab Report -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Experiment # 7: Optimization of Gas Chromatographic Analysis: The van Deemter Plot
Notes for the Lab Report -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Experiment # 5: Analysis of the Components in an Over-the-Counter Analgesic Drug using High
Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC) -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Notes for the Lab Report -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Experiment # 10: Determination of Some Anions in Aqueous Samples via Ion Chromatography ---------------
Notes for the Lab Report -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Track 2 Experiments
Experiment # 2: Determination of Fluoride in Aqueous Samples via ISE ------------------------------------------------
Notes for the Lab Report -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Experiment # 3: Determination of Iron in a Vitamin Tablet by Ultraviolet-Visible Spectroscopy
Notes for the Lab Report -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Experiment # 8: Determination of Iron in a Vitamin Tablet by Atomic Absorption Spectroscopy (AAS) -------
Notes for the Lab Report -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Experiment # 4: Analysis of the Components in an Over-the-Counter Analgesic Drug using Ultraviolet
Spectroscopy-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Notes for the Lab Report -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Experiment # 9: Determination of Na, Ca and K in mineral water by Flame Emission Photometry (FEP)
Notes for the Lab Report -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Experiments in the lab manual are not following the order mentioned above in Track 1 and Track 2.
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LABORATORY SCHEDULE (TENTATIVE)

1. Lab lectures and Experiments Schedule


Schedule of all experiments (Set of (4 + 5 = 9)) Rotational Experiments per
W Sec # Date Event
period for a total of 2 Tracks extending from Sept. 20 to Nov.30, 2017.

August 30 and 31 No LAB


1 All
Sept. 4 LAB Lecture As scheduled on your SIS for the whole semester
1 Sept. 6 LAB Lecture
2
2 Sept. 7 LAB Lecture
Lab Lecture instead of the lab
1 Sept. 13 LAB Lecture
3
2 Sept. 14 LAB Lecture
TRACK I EXPERIMENTS (1-4)
Group Name
A B C D E
1 Sept. 20 Track I GC/ECD GC/FID Drug HPLC Anions IC
4
2 Sept. 21 Experiment # GC/ECD GC/FID Drug HPLC Anions IC
A B C D E
1 Sept. 27 Track I GC/FID Drug HPLC Anions IC GC/ECD
5
2 Sept. 28 Experiment # GC/FID Drug HPLC Anions IC GC/ECD
A B C D E
1 Oct. 4 Track I Drug HPLC Anions IC GC/ECD GC/FID
6
2 Oct. 5 Experiment # Drug HPLC Anions IC GC/ECD GC/FID
A B C D E
1 Oct. 11 Track I Anions IC GC/ECD GC/FID Drug HPLC
7
2 Oct. 12 Experiment # Anions IC GC/ECD GC/FID Drug HPLC

TRACK II EXPERIMENTS (5-9)


Group Name
A B C D E
1 Oct. 18 Track I ISE Fe UV/Vis Fe AAS Drug UV Cations FEP
8
2 Oct. 19 Experiment # ISE Fe UV/Vis Fe AAS Drug UV Cations FEP
A B C D
1 Oct. 25 Track II Fe UV/Vis Fe AAS Drug UV Cations FEP ISE
9
2 Oct. 26 Experiment # Fe UV/Vis Fe AAS Drug UV Cations FEP ISE
A B C D
1 Nov. 1 Track II Fe AAS Drug UV Cations FEP ISE Fe UV/Vis
10
2 Nov. 2 Experiment # Fe AAS Drug UV Cations FEP ISE Fe UV/Vis
A B C D
1 Nov. 8 Track II Drug UV Cations FEP ISE Fe UV/Vis Fe AAS
11
2 Nov. 9 Experiment # Drug UV Cations FEP ISE Fe UV/Vis Fe AAS
A B C D
1 Nov. 15 Track II Cations FEP ISE Fe UV/Vis Fe AAS Drug UV
12
2 Nov. 16 Experiment # Cations FEP ISE Fe UV/Vis Fe AAS Drug UV
A B C D
1 Nov. 22 Holiday Holiday
13
2 Nov. 23 No Lab No Lab

1 Nov. 29 Final Final Exam


14
2 Nov. 30 Final Final Exam

2. Laboratory Report Due Dates

The laboratory due date period is one week after performing the experiment. No additional time
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will be provided and a grade of zero will be attributed to students that do not abide by this rule.
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Remember that Safety is always the first main concern in any laboratory.
Please Read carefully the corresponding sections at the beginning of your
laboratory manual: Environmental Health & Safety Center emergency
Procedures.

During experiments, Your Teaching Assistant will show you how to


comply with the requirements for maintaining a safe environment and
using safe laboratory techniques.
Prior to doing a laboratory experiment, you must understand the lab in
detail and be prepared to work efficiently.

The Professor, the Teaching Assistant and the Lab Instructors will be
circulating during the laboratory to answer questions, aid you, and also to
examine your overall laboratory performance while doing an experiment.
The value you report for your unknown will be within a certain range
around the true or known value.

Your Accuracy grade will be higher the closer that the value you report for your unknown
comes to the true value.

Accuracy is graded in 2.5-point increments: 10, 7.5, 5, 2.5 and 0. Each


experiment has its own tolerance or window within which your result must fall
for a particular grade.

For example, if the true value for your unknown is 100 (e.g. mg.L-1), and the
tolerance for that experiment is 0.3% relative error, your reported result must
fall in the range 100 0.3, (from 99.7 to 100.3) to earn the full grade of 10.
If your result lies outside this range, but within the next set of 0.3 ppb windows, 100 0.6,
you earn a grade of 7.5, and so forth.
If the tolerance for an experiment is 2% relative error, your result must fall
between 100 2, (from 98 to 102) to earn the full grade of 0 points.

Outside this window, but inside 100 4, (from 96 to 104) for 5.0 points, etc.
If your reported result is wrong because of some calculation error, even
something as simple as a factor of 2 or a power of 10, your result is wrong.

Be very sure about your calculations before you turn in your report to the
Teaching Assistant. An error in your calculation will not be taken into
consideration.
A detailed grading scheme is mentioned for each experiment in the lab manual.

NB:
o The professor has the right to schedule additional lectures or make up sessions so as to
cover the entire material in the benefit of the students.

o No additional assignments are allowed in order to improve grades.


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o The professor has the right to modify this Syllabus anytime.


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Additional information to read carefully:

If you have documented special needs and/or anticipate difficulties with the content or format of the
course and may require accommodations, please contact me and/or your academic advisor, as well as
the Accessible Education Officer in the Office of Student Affairs (x3246), as soon as possible to
discuss options for accommodations. Those seeking accommodations must submit a Student Support
Request Form along with supporting documentation to the Accessible Education Officer.

AUB is committed to facilitating a learning environment that is free of all forms of prohibited
discrimination. The Universitys non-discrimination policy and Title IX apply to, and protect, all
students, faculty, and staff. Under Title IX, discrimination based on sex and gender, including
sexual harassment, is prohibited. If you think you have experienced discrimination or harassment,
including sexual misconduct, we encourage you to tell someone promptly. If you speak to a faculty
or staff member about an issue such as harassment, sexual violence, or discrimination, the
information will be kept as private as possible, however, faculty and designated staff are required
to bring it to the attention of the Universitys Title IX Coordinator. Faculty can refer you to fully
confidential resources, and you can find information and contacts at www.aub.edu.lb/titleix. To
report an incident, contact the University's Title IX Coordinator Trudi Hodges at 01-350000 ext.
2514, 03-595525, or titleix@aub.edu.lb Confidential reports may be submitted anonymously
online through EthicsPoint at www.aub.ethicspoint.com.

if you are pregnant or planning to be pregnant, you should consult with your healthcare provider
so you become fully informed of the potential risks and understand the precautions that you should
take.

Have a Great Semester!!! Updated August 30, 2017

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