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THE UNIVERSITY of EDINBURGHDEGREE REGULATIONS & PROGRAMMES OF STUDY 2008/2009
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Concepts and Methods in Materials Chemistry Level 10 (U04214)? Credit Points : 20 ? SCQF Level : 10 ? Acronym : CHE-4-CMMat10 A lecture course covering the theory and application of modern advanced instrumentatal techniques in materials chemistry together with instruction in certain advanced aspects of inorganic chemistry. Entry Requirements? This course is not available to visting students. ? Pre-requisites : Chemistry 3A (CHE-3-A) and Chemistry 3B (CHE-3-B) at a weighted average at or above Grade D at the first attempt, and Chemistry 3P Practical and Transferable Skills (CHE-3-Pract), and Mathematics qualifications of at least 20 credits to level Applicable Mathematics 1 and Mathematical Methods 1. Or with permission of Head of School. ? Prohibited combinations : Physical Chemistry in Action Level 11 (CHE-4-PCinAct11), Physical Chemistry in Action Level 10 (CHE-4-PCinAct10), Techniques and Concepts in Inorganic Chemistry Level 11 (CHE-4-TCInorg11), Techniques and Concepts in Inorganic Chemistry Level 10 (CHE-4-TCInorg10), Concepts and Methods in Materials Chemistry Level 11 (CHE-4-CMMat11). Subject AreasHome subject areaDelivery Information? Normal year taken : 4th year ? Delivery Period : Semester 2 (Blocks 3-4) ? Contact Teaching Time : 3 hour(s) per week for 10 weeks First Class Information
All of the following classes
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Additional Class Information : 30 hours lectures + 6 hours tutorials, at times arranged. Summary of Intended Learning Outcomes
At the end of this course students will be able to:
- describe the essential elements of chemical sensors and rationalise the importance of factors such as sensitivity, selectivity, dynamic range, reproducibility, operating environment and cost - illustrate examples of the chemical synthesis of specific molecular recognition systems and natural biosensor systems - understand the physical principles of optical, electron and scanning probe microscopies, including confocal microscopy, scanning near field optical microscopy, electron microscopy, scanning tunnelling microscopy and atomic force microscopy - illustrate example applications of fluorescence microscopy and imaging and in-situ microscopy studies of surface chemistry and catalysis - explain the principles that underpin selected inorganic synthetic processes - devise synthetic routes to target inorganic and organometallic compounds - use the literature to identify preparative routes for specific compounds - appreciate the difficulties and importance of supramolecular chemistry, inspired by biology and with implications in all traditional disciplines of chemistry - rationalise the chemistry of the 4f- and 5f-elements - appreciate the chemistry used in nuclear power generation involving radioactive actinide elements - explain why complexes of gadolinium(III) are used as contrast agents in magnetic resonance imaging -outline the chemistry used in nuclear power generation involving radioactive actinide elements Assessment Information
Two degree exams of 1 hour 15 minutes.
Exam times
Contact and Further InformationThe Course Secretary should be the first point of contact for all enquiries. Course Secretary Miss Karen Harris Course Organiser Prof John Attfield School Website : http://www.chem.ed.ac.uk/ College Website : http://www.scieng.ed.ac.uk/ |
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