FAD1018 — Topics (Teaching Schedule)
[!info] Source Scanned from official Jadual Pengajaran & Penilaian / Teaching Schedule & Assessment (FAD1018). 7 pages covering Weeks 1–18, assessment weightage, and references.
Course Overview
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Course | FAD1018 — Basic Chemistry II |
| Duration | 18 weeks (22 including exams) |
| Lectures | 48 lectures (Kuliah 1–48) |
| Tutorials | 14 tutorials |
| Assessments | Tutorial (10%), PBL (10%), Online quizzes ×2 (10%), Midterm (10%), Final exam (50%) |
Weekly Topic Breakdown
Week 1 — Chemical Equilibrium (Keseimbangan Kimia)
Kuliah 1–3
- Define reversible reactions and dynamic/chemical equilibrium
- Understand, state and apply characteristics of dynamic equilibrium
- Define the law of equilibrium
- Differentiate equilibrium constants (Kc and Kp)
- Write equilibrium expressions (Kc and Kp) for homogeneous and heterogeneous reactions
- Calculate equilibrium constants and related quantities (degree of dissociation)
- Understand relationship between Kc and Kp: Kc(RT)^Δn = Kp
- Write reaction quotient (Q) expression
- Calculate and apply Q to predict direction of equilibrium shift
References
- Chemical Equilibrium, Pre-University Chemistry, Norbani et.al, SAP Education (2021)
Week 2 — Chemical Equilibrium & Ionic Equilibrium
Kuliah 4
- Define Le Chatelier's principle
- Determine factors affecting equilibrium position and constant
- Explain effect of concentration, pressure, temperature, inert gas addition and catalyst
- Explain importance of chemical equilibrium in industry
Kuliah 5–6 — Keseimbangan Ion (Ionic Equilibrium)
- Define acids and bases according to Arrhenius, Lewis and Brønsted-Lowry
- Define and identify conjugate acid-base pairs (Brønsted-Lowry theory)
- Define strong and weak acids/bases
- Define pH and pOH, relate to ionic product of water Kw at 25 °C
- Calculate pH of strong acids and bases
- Relate strength of weak acids/bases to their respective dissociation constants
References
- Ionic Equilibrium, ISE Chemistry 13th Edition, Raymond Chang, 8th Edition, McGraw Hill (2018)
Week 3 — Ionic Equilibrium
Kuliah 7–9
- Perform calculations involving pH, dissociation constant, initial concentration, equilibrium concentration and degree of dissociation
- Write and explain salt hydrolysis equations
- Classify salts as neutral, acidic or basic
- Define buffer solutions and quantitatively explain how buffers control pH
- Derive and use Henderson–Hasselbalch equation to calculate buffer pH
Tutorial 1
References
- Ionic Equilibrium, ISE Chemistry 13th Edition, Raymond Chang, 8th Edition, McGraw Hill (2018)
Week 4 — Solubility Product (Hasil Darab Keterlarutan)
Kuliah 10–12
- Define saturated solution
- Identify soluble and insoluble compounds
- Write solubility equilibrium expressions
- Define solubility and molar solubility
- Define solubility product (Ksp)
- Write Ksp expression
- Understand and apply Ksp concept in related calculations
- Calculate Ksp from solubility, molar solubility, ion concentrations
- Write solubility quotient expression (Q)
- Calculate and apply Q to predict precipitation formation
Tutorial 2
References
- Solubility Product, Chemistry A Molecular Approach, 5th Edition, Nivaldo J. Tro, Pearson (2020)
Week 5 — Solubility Product & Phase Equilibrium
Kuliah 13
- Understand ion separation concept via fractional precipitation and perform related calculations
- Define and explain common ion effect
- Apply Le Chatelier's principle to explain common ion effect
- Perform calculations involving common ion and explain differences in solubility caused by common ion effect
Kuliah 14–15 — Keseimbangan Fasa (Phase Equilibrium)
- Define phase and component
- Define colligative properties
- Perform calculations involving colligative properties
- Define triple point and critical point for single-component systems
- Sketch phase diagrams for H₂O and CO₂
- Explain phase changes with temperature and pressure
- State properties of ideal and non-ideal solutions for two-component systems
- Define and apply Raoult's Law
Tutorial 3
References
- Phase Equilibrium, Pre-University Chemistry, Norbani et.al, SAP Education (2021)
Week 6 — Phase Equilibrium & Stereochemistry
Kuliah 16–17
- Define azeotrope
- Determine composition of azeotropic mixtures
- Sketch phase diagrams for two-component systems: ideal, positive deviation and negative deviation from Raoult's Law
- Explain principles involved in fractional distillation
- Determine residue and distillate from boiling point-composition phase diagrams
Kuliah 18 — Stereokimia (Stereochemistry)
- Draw 3D images and Fischer projections
- Define optically active compounds
- Define levorotatory and dextrorotatory
Tutorial 4
References
- Stereochemistry, Organic Chemistry, Wade, 9th Edition, Pearson (2017)
- Phase Equilibrium, Pre-University Chemistry, Norbani et.al, SAP Education (2021)
Week 7 — Stereochemistry & Alcohol/Phenol
Kuliah 19
- Explain what racemic mixtures are
- Draw various stereoisomers with more than one stereogenic center
Kuliah 20–21 — Alkohol & Fenol (Alcohol & Phenol)
- Explain structural and optical isomerism in hydroxy compounds
- State physical properties of hydroxy compounds
- Classify alcohols as primary, secondary and tertiary
- Explain alcohol preparation (e.g. ethanol from fermentation, ethene hydration in industry)
- Understand alcohol reactions: oxidation, dehydration, reaction with Na, haloalkane formation, esterification and acylation
Tutorial 5
References
- Stereochemistry, Organic Chemistry, Wade, 9th Edition, Pearson (2017)
- Alcohol & Phenol, Organic Chemistry 9th Edition McMurry Solution Manual (2017)
Week 8 — Alcohol, Phenol & Aldehyde/Ketone
Kuliah 22–23 — Alkohol & Fenol
- Explain tests to determine alcohol class and type: Lucas test
- State uses of alcohol as antiseptic, solvent and fuel
- Explain relative acidity of water, phenol and alcohol with reference to inductive and resonance effects
- Explain phenol preparation from cumene process
- Understand phenol reactions with: Na, NaOH, acyl chloride and electrophilic substitution in benzene ring
- Explain use of bromine water and iron(III) chloride aqueous solution as tests for phenol
- Explain use of phenol in cyclohexanol manufacture and nylon-6,6 production
Kuliah 24 — Aldehid & Keton (Aldehyde & Ketone)
- Understand general formulae of aldehydes and ketones
- Draw structures and name aldehydes and ketones (parent chain ≤C₁₀) using IUPAC nomenclature
- Explain carbonyl compound preparation via: ozonolysis of alkenes, Friedel-Crafts acylation for aromatic ketones and oxidation of alcohols
Tutorial 6
References
- Alcohol & Phenol, Organic Chemistry 9th Edition McMurry Solution Manual (2017)
- Aldehyde & Ketone, Organic Chemistry 9th Edition McMurry Solution Manual (2017)
Week 9 — Aldehyde & Ketone
Kuliah 25–26
- Explain chemical properties with reference to: nucleophilic addition with KCN/H⁺ or NaCN/H⁺, water, alcohol, sodium bisulfite, NaHSO₃ and Grignard reagents
- Explain alcohol reduction using LiAlH₄ followed by H₃O⁺ or NaBH₄ in methanol or H₂/catalyst
- Explain condensation reactions with ammonia derivatives: hydroxylamine, hydrazine, phenylhydrazine and 2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazine (2,4-DNPH) as carbonyl identification test
- Explain oxidation with KMnO₄/H⁺ or Cr₂O₇²⁻/H⁺ and iodoform test for methyl carbonyl group identification
- Distinguish between carbonyl compounds and other compounds
- Explain synthesis of compounds related to carbonyl reactions
- Explain original compounds like glucose, sucrose and other carbohydrates possessing >C=O group
Kuliah 27
- Explain characteristics of glucose as reducing sugar
- Explain D and L stereoisomers of sugars with reference to configuration of chiral carbon atom furthest from aldehyde/ketone group, and that D form occurs most frequently in nature
Tutorial 7
References
- Aldehyde & Ketone, Organic Chemistry 9th Edition McMurry Solution Manual (2017)
Week 10 — Midterm Examination
UJIAN PERTENGAHAN SEMESTER II (10% markah penilaian)
Week 11 — Carboxylic Acids & Derivatives
Kuliah 28–30 — Asid Karbosilik & Terbitannya (Carboxylic Acids & Derivatives)
- Explain physical properties: boiling point, solubility and acidity
- Explain carboxylic acid preparation via oxidation, nitrile compound hydrolysis and Grignard reagent carboxylation
- Explain chemical properties: neutralization, reduction, esterification and amide formation
Tutorial 8
References
- Carboxylic Acid, Chemistry (3): Introducing inorganic, organic and physical chemistry, Andrew Burrows et.al., Oxford University Press (2021)
Week 12 — Amines & Amino Acids
Kuliah 31–33 — Amina & Asid Amino (Amines & Amino Acids)
- Classify amines as primary, secondary and tertiary
- Draw and name amines using IUPAC nomenclature
- Explain physical properties: boiling point and solubility
- Compare basicity of ammonia, aliphatic amines and aromatic amines
- Explain preparation of aromatic amines, primary aliphatic amines using nitriles, and primary/secondary/tertiary amines using amides (Hoffmann degradation)
- Explain chemical properties with reference to reactions with acyl chloride, anhydride, nitrous acid and bromine water
Tutorial 9
References
- Amine & Amino acid, Chemistry (3): Introducing inorganic, organic and physical chemistry, Andrew Burrows et.al., Oxford University Press (2021)
Week 13 — Amines & Amino Acids
Kuliah 34
- Draw amino acid structures in acidic, basic and neutral pH media
- Explain amino acid reactions
- Explain peptide bond formation in polypeptides
- Explain protein structure and importance of amino acids and proteins
References
- Amine & Amino acid, Chemistry (3): Introducing inorganic, organic and physical chemistry, Andrew Burrows et.al., Oxford University Press (2021)
Week 14 — Polymers & Thermochemistry
Kuliah 35 — Polimer (Polymers)
- Define and explain terminology, addition and condensation polymerization
- Classify and explain uses of polymers
Kuliah 36 — Termokimia (Thermochemistry)
- Explain endothermic and exothermic reactions
- State standard conditions and define standard enthalpy of reaction
- Define enthalpies of formation, combustion, neutralization, hydration and solution
Tutorial 10
References
- Introducing inorganic, organic and physical chemistry, Andrew Burrows et.al., Oxford University Press (2021)
- Thermochemistry, ISE Chemistry 13th Edition, Raymond Chang, 8th Edition, McGraw Hill (2018)
Week 14 — Mid-Semester Break
CUTI PERTENGAHAN SEMESTER II
Week 15 — Thermochemistry
Kuliah 37–39
- State Hess's Law
- Use Hess's Law to calculate enthalpy change
- Define lattice energy
- Explain ion hydration process
- Sketch Born-Haber cycle
- Calculate enthalpy change
References
- Thermochemistry, ISE Chemistry 13th Edition, Raymond Chang, 8th Edition, McGraw Hill (2018)
Week 16 — Kinetic Chemistry
Kuliah 40–42 — Kimia Kinetik (Kinetic Chemistry)
- Define reaction rate
- Explain concentration-time graphs
- Perform calculations using rate equations for differential and integrated rate laws
- Explain factors required for collision theory
- Define activation energy
- State characteristics of activated complexes
- Write rate equation expressions
- Define rate law, reaction order and half-life
- Write rate equations for zero, first and second order reactions
- Determine reaction order involving one reactant
- Explain effect of concentration, pressure, temperature, catalyst and surface area on reaction rate
- Explain effect of temperature on reaction rate using Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution curves
Tutorial 11
References
- Kinetics Chemistry, Pre-University Chemistry, Norbani et.al, SAP Education (2021)
Week 17 — Kinetic Chemistry & Electrochemistry
Kuliah 43 — Kimia Kinetik
- Explain effect of catalyst on activation energy based on energy profile diagrams for exothermic and endothermic reactions
- Relate rate constant with temperature and activation energy using Arrhenius equation
Kuliah 44 — Elektrokimia (Electrochemistry)
- Define oxidation-reduction reactions
- Sketch and explain components and operation of galvanic cells
- Write half-cell and overall reaction equations
- Write cell notation
References
- Kinetics Chemistry, Pre-University Chemistry, Norbani et.al, SAP Education (2021)
- Electrochemistry, Chemistry A Molecular Approach, 5th Edition, Nivaldo J. Tro, Pearson (2020)
Week 18 — Electrochemistry
Kuliah 45
- Define standard electrode potential and standard cell potential
- Sketch, label and explain standard hydrogen electrode (SHE)
- Explain methods used to determine standard reduction potential series
- Use standard electrode potential values to compare relative strength of oxidizing or reducing agents
Tutorial 12 (PBL Session 1)
Kuliah 46–48
- Calculate standard cell potential and predict spontaneity of redox reactions
- Use Nernst equation to determine cell potential, concentration or partial pressure of species and equilibrium constant
- Explain components and operation of electrolytic cells
- Explain effect of concentration, standard electrode potential and electrode type on selective discharge process
- Explain electrolysis of NaCl and Na₂SO₄ using inert electrodes
- Predict electrolysis products
- Define and apply Faraday's first law of electrolysis
Tutorial 13 (PBL Session 2)
References
- Electrochemistry, Chemistry A Molecular Approach, 5th Edition, Nivaldo J. Tro, Pearson (2020)
Week 19 — Online Quiz
Tutorial 14 KUIZ ATAS TALIAN (10% markah penilaian)
Weeks 20–22 — Revision & Final Examination
| Week | Activity |
|---|---|
| 20 | MINGGU ULANGKAJI (Revision Week) |
| 21 | PEPERIKSAAN AKHIR (Final Examination) |
| 22 | PEPERIKSAAN AKHIR (Final Examination) |
Assessment Weightage
| Assessment | Weightage |
|---|---|
| Tutorial | 10 |
| Problem-based learning (PBL) | 10 |
| Kuiz ringkas (atas talian) × 2 | 10 |
| Ujian pertengahan semester II (30 Q MCQ) | 10 |
| Kuiz atas talian (30 Q MCQ) | 10 |
| Peperiksaan akhir | 50 |
| Total | 100 |
Related Pages
- FAD1018 - Basic Chemistry II — Main course page
- Chemistry Exam Analysis — Topic weightage and priority study plan
- FAD1018 Mastery Set — Interleaved Chemistry II — Mixed practice problems
Concept Pages Covered
- Chemical Equilibrium — Weeks 1–2
- Ionic Equilibria — Weeks 2–3
- Solubility Product — Week 4
- Phase Equilibria — Weeks 5–6
- Stereochemistry — Weeks 6–7
- Alcohol & Phenol — Weeks 7–8
- Carbonyl Compounds — Weeks 8–10
- Carboxylic Acids & Derivatives — Week 11
- Amines & Amino Acids — Weeks 12–13
- Polymer Chemistry — Week 14
- Thermochemistry — Weeks 14–15
- Kinetic Chemistry — Weeks 16–17
- Electrochemistry — Weeks 17–18