All Courses

  • 201820.CHEM105.02

    Introduction to Chemical Principles (CHEM 105) is a course that provides an introduction to chemistry in general, and to the chemistry of living things in particular. It is directed toward students with career goals in nursing, allied health, biological sciences, public health, and other disciplines in which understanding the fundamentals of biological chemistry are valuable. The course introduces elements, atoms, the periodic table, and the quantitative nature of chemistry. It also individually highlights the nature of ionic and molecular compounds. Discussion is made on chemical reactions and their stoichiometry, energies, rates, and equilibria. Other topics essential to applied chemistry that are considered include gases, liquids, solids, solutions, acids and bases, as well as nuclear chemistry.

  • 201820.CHEM314.01

    This course is an attempt to present the essential ideas of quantum mechanics hopefully in a way that would be interesting, comprehensible and enjoyable to the students with a background of one year of college calculus and physics. The lectures in this class will cover non-relativistic wave me- chanics, molecular spectroscopy and introduction to statistical thermodynamics.

  • 201830.HIST280.D44

    This course will trace the history of alcohol and drugs from prehistoric times to the modern era. There are two required books, plus some additional online readings.

  • 201860.CHEM162.01

    CHEM 162-46 (1-0-3): is a continuation of the General Chemistry I Laboratory (CHEM 142) where students continue to develop basic chemistry laboratory skills while experimenting with solution properties, kinetics, chemical equilibria, acid-base equilibria, solubility equilibria, thermodynanics, electrochemistry, and qualitative and elementary quantitative analysis.

  • 201860.CHEM105.02

    Introduction to Chemical Principles (CHEM 105) is a course that provides an introduction to chemistry in general, and to the chemistry of living things in particular. It is directed toward students with career goals in nursing, allied health, biological sciences, public health, and other disciplines in which understanding the fundamentals of biological chemistry are valuable. The course introduces elements, atoms, the periodic table, and the quantitative nature of chemistry. It also individually highlights the nature of ionic and molecular compounds. Discussion is made on chemical reactions and their stoichiometry, energies, rates, and equilibria. Other topics essential to applied chemistry that are considered include gases, liquids, solids, solutions, acids and bases, as well as nuclear chemistry.

  • 201860.CHEM105L.03

    CHEM 105L (1-0-2) Introduction to Chemical Principles Laboratory: This one-semester laboratory course is designed for non-chemistry majors. It introduces how to safely and effectively conduct independent laboratory experiments, review data and construct graphs, physical and chemical properties, law of conservation of energy, electronic configuration of elements, molecular geometry, types of chemical bonds, chemical reactions, concentrations of solutions (e.g. molarity) and ideal gas law. Prerequisite: MATH 123 or MATH 129 Corequisite: CHEM 105

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