Laboratory Chemistry

A vacuum distallation apparatus.

Setting up the vacuum distillation apparatus for the Essential Oils experiment. (Photo by Chemistry laboratory staff.)

Instructor(s)

MIT Course Number

5.310

As Taught In

Spring 2003

Level

Undergraduate

Cite This Course

Course Description

Course Highlights

This site features detailed descriptions of the five experiments completed by students in the course during the semester: unknown amino acid, ferrocene, essential oils, potentiometric titration, and kinetics.

Course Description

Laboratory Chemistry (5.310) introduces experimental chemistry for students requiring a chemistry laboratory who are not majoring in chemistry. Students must have completed general chemistry (5.111) and have completed or be concurrently enrolled in the first semester of organic chemistry (5.12). The course covers principles and applications of chemical laboratory techniques, including preparation and analysis of chemical materials, measurement of pH, gas and liquid chromatography, visible-ultraviolet spectrophotometry, infrared spectroscopy, kinetics, data analysis, and elementary synthesis.

NOTE: The Staff for this course would like to acknowledge that the experiments include contributions from past instructors, course textbooks, and others affiliated with course #5.310. Since the following works have evolved over a period of many years, no single source can be attributed.

WARNING NOTICE

The experiments described in these materials are potentially hazardous and require a high level of safety training, special facilities and equipment, and supervision by appropriate individuals. You bear the sole responsibility, liability, and risk for the implementation of such safety procedures and measures. MIT shall have no responsibility, liability, or risk for the content or implementation of any of the material presented.

Legal Notice

Related Content

Janet Schrenk, and Mircea Gheorghiu. 5.310 Laboratory Chemistry. Spring 2003. Massachusetts Institute of Technology: MIT OpenCourseWare, https://ocw.mit.edu. License: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA.


For more information about using these materials and the Creative Commons license, see our Terms of Use.


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