CHEM3021 Physical Chemistry
Later Year Course
| Offered By | Research School of Chemistry |
|---|---|
| Academic Career | Undergraduate |
| Course Subject | Chemistry |
| Offered in | First Semester, 2010 and First Semester, 2011 |
| Unit Value | 3 units |
| Course Description |
The course covers the fundamentals of classical thermodynamics as applied to simple gases & liquids, polymers and their solutions, as well as interfaces. These fundamentals are necessary to understand every-day phenomena including how trees feed nutrients to their canopies, modern strategies of shampoo formulation, the behaviour of “silly-putty” toys, and the constraints on the work performance of engines, large and small, amongst other examples.
The course is comprised of three equi-sized blocks: BLOCK 1: Introduces classical thermodynamics using a statistical description. (In some textbooks, this is referred to as introductory statistical thermodynamics.) The lecturer develops and applies the tools/concepts to describe the behaviour of gases, simple liquids, as well as phase (gas-liquid) phase equilibrium and liquid mixtures.
BLOCK 2: Builds/reinforces these tools/concepts by using them to describe the behaviour of single polymer chains, such as DNA or proteins, as well as solutions of polymers. Liquid mixtures are then revisited, with a description of de-mixing and partial mixing (refereed to as phase separation), with a simple extension to polymer solutions. The lecturer also introduces transport properties of simple fluids (diffusion, viscosity, and thermal/electric conductivity) and extends these to liquid solutions. BLOCK 3 : Applies the classical thermodynamics principles to the description of interfacial phenomena, including wettability, capillarity, and the effects of surface-active molecules or surfactants. |
| Indicative Assessment | 50% Assignments (usually 3-4) and 50% by exam (midterm and final). |
| Workload | A maximum of 36 hours of lectures/tutorials. |
| Areas of Interest | Chemistry |
| Requisite Statement | CHEM2205 or CHEM2101, 1st year mathematics recommended |
| Incompatibility | CHEM3102 |
| Science Group | C |
| Academic Contact | A/Professor Edith Sevick |
The information published on the Study at ANU 2010 website applies to the 2010 academic year only. All information provided on this website replaces the information contained in the Study at ANU 2009 website.




