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Junior Freshman Chemistry

Junior Freshman Chemistry for:

  • Science
  • Nanoscience, Physics and Chemistry of Advanced Materials
  • Chemistry with Molecular Modelling
  • Medicinal Chemistry
  • Human Genetics
  • Earth Sciences (CH1101 only)

Course Coordinator: Dr. N. Scully

JF Chemistry Timetable Semester 2 2012-13 (PDF) | Text Books

JF Health Sciences Timetable Semester 1 2012-13 (PDF)

General Description

Chemistry is a fundamental science the influence of which is spread throughout other sciences, and is dominant in modern life. If a material is needed, chemists can make it, be it polythene for a washing bowl, the detergent to put in it, the different silicon-based materials for contact lenses or computer chips or the liquid crystals used in electronic displays. A knowledge of chemistry lies behind the production of the fertilisers that assist the growth of the food we need, as well as the drugs and antiseptics, which have transformed medicine. Behind these obvious contributions to our daily lives, there is a substantial body of chemical ideas. These ideas contribute greatly to many other areas of science, perhaps most obviously to our understanding of the DNA structure. The interplay of chemical and physical ideas has produced the new Science of Materials, and the tools of the analytical chemist are vital to the Environmental Scientist.

It is the chemical ideas, and the techniques chemists have developed to make these ideas work, which are taught in the lectures and practical classes in the School of Chemistry. The first-year course is a basic minimal package that which will allow the student to move into and progress in other areas. A thorough understanding of many other sciences will benefit greatly by also taking the second year course in chemistry. At this stage the student will have learned something of how chemists think, how they plan the transformation of one substance into another through chemical reactions, how they analyse the products and the sort of physical and chemical measurements that they make to gather useful data about compounds.

The JF Chemistry course provides a general introduction to the fundamentals of modern chemistry, and forms the basis for further studies, both in chemistry and in other sciences. It consists of two modules, Chemistry 101: General and Physical Chemistry (10 Credits), and Chemistry 102: Introduction to systematic Inorganic and Organic Chemistry (10 Credits).

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Module CH1101

Course Title Lecturer Number of Lectures
Introduction Dr W. Schmitt 8 Lectures
Introduction to Physical Chemistry Dr M.E.G. Lyons/Dr D.A. Mac Dónaill 26 Lectures
The Electronic Theory of Chemistry Dr B. Baker 8 Lectures
Practicals Dr N. Scully
BC Basic Tutorials

Module CH1102

Course Title Lecturer Number of Lectures
Chemistry of the Elements Prof S.M. Draper / Dr C. Schulzke 12 Lectures
Introduction to Organic Chemistry Dr E.M. Scanlan / Prof S. Connon 29 Lectures
Practicals Dr N. Scully
BC Basic Tutorials

Sponsors Chemistry

This course is funded by the Irish government under the National Development Plan 2007-2013 and aided by the European Social Fund (ESF) under the Human Capital Investment Operational Programme 2007-2013.

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Last updated 11 January 2013 by School of Chemistry (Email).