CHEM-C 101 Elementary Chemistry I (3 cr)

Essential principles of chemistry, atomic and molecular structure, bonding, properties and reactions of elements and compounds, stoichiometry, solutions, and acids and bases. For students who are not planning careers in the sciences and for those with no previous course work in chemistry.

  • For non-science majors, including nursing majors and those planning to enter allied health programs such as dental hygiene, or for those wanting a preparatory course prior to CHEM-C 105
  • Offered fall semester
  • Prerequisites: None.
  • Suggested co-requisite: CHEM-C 121 (lab portion)

CHEM-C 104 Physical Sciences and Society (3 cr)

An integrated survey of modern applications and relationships of physical sciences to society developed from the basic concepts of motion, structure of matter, energy, reactions, and the environment and leading to considerations of specific problem areas such as: pollution, drugs, energy alternatives, consumer products, and transportation.

  • Credit given for only one of the following: CHEM-C 104, PHYS-P 104
  • Offered fall and spring semesters.
  • Prerequisites: None.

    CHEM-C 105 Principles of Chemistry I (3 cr)

    Basic principles including stoichiometry, thermochemistry, atomic and molecular structure, gases, solutions, and selected topics in descriptive chemistry.

    • Credit given for only one of the following: CHEM-C 100, CHEM-C 101, CHEM-C 105, or CHEM-S 105.
    • Offered fall and spring semesters.
    • Prerequisites: Appropriate placement by academic advisor.
    • Suggested Co-requisite: CHEM-C 125 (lab portion)

    CHEM-C 106 Principles of Chemistry II (3 cr)

    Chemical equilibria with emphasis on acids, bases, solubility, electrochemistry, elementary thermodynamics, chemical kinetics, and selected topics in descriptive chemistry.

    • Credit given for only one of the following: CHEM-C 106 or CHEM-C 102 or CHEM-S 106.
    • Offered spring and summer semesters.
    • Prerequisites: CHEM-C 105 and eligibility to take MATH-M 125.
    • Suggested Co-requisite: CHEM-C 126 (lab portion)

    CHEM-C 121 Elementary Chemistry Laboratory I (2 cr)

    Introduction to the techniques and reasoning of experimental chemistry. Emphasis is given to study of physical and chemical properties of inorganic compounds.

    • For non-science majors, including nursing majors and those planning to enter allied health programs such as dental hygiene.
    • Offered fall semester
    • Co-requisite: CHEM-C 101

    CHEM-C 125 Experimental Chemistry I (2 cr)

    Introduction to laboratory experimentation with emphasis on the collection and use of experimental data and focusing on illustration of principles taught in CHEM-C 105, with a particular focus on chemical measurements, stoichiometry, and properties of solutions.

    • Lab fee required.
    • Credit given for only one of the following: CHEM-C 121, CHEM-C 125, or CHEM-S 125.
    • Offered fall and spring semesters.
    • Co-requisite: CHEM-C 105 (lecture portion)

    CHEM-C 126 Experimental Chemistry II (2 cr)

    A continuation of CHEM-C 125, with experiments that focus on illustrating concepts involving gas laws, kinetics, acid-base chemistry and thermodynamics.

    • Lab fee required.
    • Credit given for only one of the following: CHEM-C 126, CHEM-C 122, or CHEM-S 126.
    • Offered spring and summer semesters.
    • Prerequisite: CHEM-C 105/CHEM-C 125
    • Co-requisite: CHEM-C 106 (lecture portion)

    CHEM-C 224 Quantitative Analysis (4 cr)

    A laboratory course for students with vocational goals that require skill and/or knowledge in the application of modern quantitative techniques to problems in chemical analysis.

    CHEM-C 341 Organic Chemistry I Lecture (3 cr)

    Chemistry of carbon compounds. Nomenclature, qualitative theory of valence; structure and reactions. Syntheses and reactions of major classes of monofunctional compounds.

    CHEM-C 342 Organic Chemistry II Lecture (3 cr)

    Syntheses and reactions of polyfunctional compounds, natural and industrial products; physical and chemical methods of identification.

    • Offered spring semesters.
    • Prerequisite: CHEM-C 341
    • Suggested Co-requisite: CHEM-C 344 (lab portion)

    CHEM-C 343 Organic Chemistry I Laboratory (2 cr)

    Laboratory instruction in the fundamental techniques of organic chemistry and the use of general synthetic methods.

    • Offered fall semesters.
    • Co-requisite: CHEM-C 341 (lecture portion)

    CHEM-C 344 Organic Chemistry II Laboratory (2 cr)

    Preparation, isolation, and identification of organic compounds; emphasis on modern research methods.

    CHEM-C 390 Special Topic in Chemistry (1-5 cr)

    Course content varies.

    *May take course again as course topic changes.

    • Offered occasionally
    • Prerequisite: Depends on topic content, based on instructor permission.

    CHEM-C 484 Biomolecules & Catabolism (3 cr)

    This is the first semester of a two semester biochemistry course sequence. The course covers protein composition and structure, hemoglobin, basic concepts of enzymes, catalytic and regulatory strategies, carbohydrates, lipids, glycolysis, TCA cycle, oxidative phosphorylation, molecular motors, membrane channels and pumps.

    • Offered fall semesters.
    • Prerequisite: One year of college level organic chemistry (CHEM-C 341 and CHEM-C 342).

    CHEM-C 485 Biosynthetic Pathways and Control of Metabolism (3 cr)

    This is the second semester of a two-semester biochemistry course sequence. The course covers signal transduction pathways, photosynthesis, pentose phosphate pathway, glycogen metabolism, fatty acid metabolism, protein turnover and amino acid catabolism, biosynthesis of amino acids, nucleotides, and membrane lipids and steroids, integration of metabolism, sensory systems and drug development.

    • Offered spring semesters.
    • Prerequisite: CHEM-C 484

    CHEM-C 486 Biological Chemistry Laboratory (3 cr)

    Laboratory experience in biochemistry, including biomolecule isolation, purification, enzyme kinetics, and biomolecule characterization by electrophoresis, centrifugation, spectroscopic methods; and chromatography. Lab fee required.

    • Offered spring semesters.
    • Prerequisite: CHEM-C 484

    CHEM-C 490 Individual Study (1-6 cr)

    Designed to provide an opportunity for students to receive credit for research. Those research topics may vary based on instructor or faculty member. Must complete a written assignment as evidence of each semester's work.

    • Independent Study.
    • Prerequisite: Consent of instructor

    CHEM-N 100 Nutrition (4 cr)

    Basic principles of general and organic chemistry, digestion, absorption and storage of various nutrients, food facts, and fallacies. Food habits, heart disease, obesity, cancer, and other consumer-oriented information. Food addiction, sociocultural and economic factors.

    • Offered every semester.
    • Prerequisite: None

    CHEM-T 550 Introductory Biochemistry (3 cr)

    Protein composition and structure, Enzyme kinetics, catalytic and regulatory strategies, Carbohydrates, Nucleic acids, Lipids and cell membranes, Transducing and storing energy - metabolic cycles, Responding to environmental changes.

    • Offered in fall semesters.
    • Open to Graduate-level students only.

    CHEM-T 580 Physical Biochemistry (3 cr)

    An illustration of the physical principles underpinning the structure and dynamics of biomolecules, as well as experimental and computational methods used to study biochemical systems.

    • Offered periodically

    CHEM-T 590 Chemistry Capstone (3 cr)

    Integration of knowledge and understanding from the literature that transcends sub-disciplinary boundaries of chemistry.

    • Offered summer semester
    • Prerequisite: 9 graduate credit hours in Chemistry; 12 credit hours preferred