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Lecture #1 – The Nature of Chemistry Chemistry 142 B James B. Callis, Instructor Winter Quarter, 2006.

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Presentation on theme: "Lecture #1 – The Nature of Chemistry Chemistry 142 B James B. Callis, Instructor Winter Quarter, 2006."— Presentation transcript:

1 Lecture #1 – The Nature of Chemistry Chemistry 142 B James B. Callis, Instructor Winter Quarter, 2006

2 Chemistry The branch of science that deals with the properties of substances and the reactions that transform them into other substances. Chemistry is a central science. Chemistry uses the scientific method to advance its knowledge.

3 Chemistry Oceanography Atmospheric Sciences Economics Physics Medicine Governments Geology Anthropology Biology Astronomy Politics People Chemistry As a Central Science

4 Definitions Law – a summary of observed behaviors. Hypothesis – a possible explanation of an observation or set of observations. Theory – A set of tested hypothesis that gives an overall explanation of some natural phenomenon or phenomena.

5 The Scientific Method Information or data is gathered by careful observation of the phenomenon being studied. On the basis of that information a preliminary generalization or hypothesis is formed. A series of experiments is devised to test the predictive power of the hypothesis.

6 The Scientific Method (cont.) (a)Accepted as scientific theory. (b) Modified so that all results are adequately explained. (c) Discarded. On the basis of the experimental tests, the hypothesis may be

7 Making Observations Formulating Hypothesis Extracting Predictions From the Hypothesis Performing Experiments Components of the Scientific Method

8 The Modern Science Paradigm

9 Paths of Science Deduction - going from the general to the particular. An intermediate step, simulation, is often taken. The "easy" way. Induction - going from the particular to the general. The "hard" way.

10 Hallmarks of a Good Theory It explains the deficiencies of previous theories, and/or subsumes them. It has predictive power. In chemistry, it explains macroscopic phenomena in terms of atomic and molecular phenomena. It is elegant and simple.

11 Example: 19th Century Physics vs. 20th Century Physics Classical Mechanics of Newton vs. Quantum Mechanics of Schrödinger

12 Remember: The #1 job of a scientist is to rule out hypotheses. "The great tragedy of Science - the slaying of a beautiful hypothesis by an ugly fact." - T.H. Huxley

13 What Happened To The Balloon? It was wimpy and broke. It was fearful of all of the people. It got zapped by Klingons. Hydrogen burns!

14 2H 2 (g) + O 2 (g) = 2H 2 O (g) + Energy Hydrogen and oxygen are diatomic gases. Water can be a gas. ENERGY was released -- This is characteristic of an exothermic reaction. This is a balanced chemical reaction.

15 Chemistry 142 A: Professor Callis Text: Chemical Principles - By Steven S. Zumdahl Chapter 1 : Keys to the Study of Chemistry Chapter 2 : Atoms, Molecules and Ions Chapter 3 : Stoichiometry: Mole - Mass Relationships in Chemical Systems Chapter 4 : The Major Classes of Chemical Reactions Chapter 5 : Gases and the Kinetic - Molecular Theory Chapter 6 :Chemical Equilibrium Chapter 7 : Acids and Bases Chapter 8 : Applications of Aqueous Equilibria

16 Chemistry Homework Linus Pauling - 1967 “ Chemistry is not a spectator sport. You must become involved. And that means that you must do homework!”


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