Addis Ababa Institute of Technology
School of Chemical and Bioengineering
General and Inorganic Chemistry (Chem 1061)
Total Credit Hours: 6 ECTS
Prepared by Sendeku Takele (Dr. rer. nat.)_2024
Office: PC104
Introduction to Chemistry
An overview of methods used
Overview of Chemistry, in modern chemistry
including classification • Chromatography
Concepts in Inorganic Chemistry • Spectroscopy
Chemical equations • Diffraction methods
Stoichiometry Laboratory practices
• Laboratory safety
Thermochemistry
• Synthesis
• Analysis
Introduction to Chemistry
Chemistry is the scientific discipline that focuses on matter.
Matter is anything that occupies space and has mass.
Chemistry deals with a matter’s:
• Composition
• Structure
• Properties, and
• Changes that occur in matter.
• Chemical
• Physical
Chemical Change
A processes, where a substance is transformed into another form as a
result of combination or dissociation of atoms.
Examples
• Rusting
• Burning
• Fermentation
• Changing milk to yogurt, and
• Addition of water to calcium oxide
Physical Change
A process, where a matter doesn’t change its identity, and can be
reversed.
Each matter retains its composition.
Most physical changes are accompanied by changes in physical state
melting of solids boiling of liquids
Water remains H2O whether it is in solid state (ice), liquid water or
gaseous state (steam).
Physical change also involves making or separating mixtures.
Physical properties can be;
Extensive physical properties: depend on the quantity of sample.
Examples
• Length, Diameter, Mass, and Volume
Intensive physical properties: do not depend on the quantities of a
substance present.
Examples
• Color, Melting point, and Hardness
Intensive properties are useful in distinguishing between different
substances because they do not vary from sample to sample.
Basic Chemistry Vocabulary Definitions
Accuracy: When you measure something, the accuracy is how close your
measured value is to the real value.
Activation energy: The minimum amount of energy needed for a chemical
reaction to take place.
Activity series: Arrangement of elements in the order of how much they
tend to react with water and acids.
Actual yield: When you do a chemical reaction, this is the amount of
chemical that you actually make (i.e. the amount of stuff you can weigh).
Adsorption: When one substance collects of the surface of another one
Alkali metals: Group I in the periodic table
Alkaline earth metals: Group II in the periodic table
Alkaline earth metals: Group II in the periodic table
Alkane: An organic molecule which contains only single carbon-carbon
bonds
Alkene: An organic molecule containing at least one C=C bond
Alkyne: An organic molecule containing at least one C-C triple bond
Allotropes: When you have different forms of an element in the same state.
Amphoteric: When something is both an acid and a base.
Anode: The electrode where oxidation occurs. In other words, this is where
electrons are lost by a substance.
Aqueous: dissolved in water
Atomic radius: This is one half the distances between two bonded nuclei.
Battery: This is when a bunch of voltaic cells are stuck together.
Bidentate ligand: A ligand that can attach twice to a metal ion.
Bond energy: The amount of energy it takes to break one mole of bonds.
Bond length: The average distance between the nuclei of two bonded
atoms.
Buffer: A liquid that resists change in pH by the addition of acid or base.
Catalyst: A substance that speeds up a chemical reaction without being
used up by the reaction
Cathode: The electrode in which reduction occurs.
Chromatography: This is when you use a system containing a mobile
phase and a stationary phase to separate different compounds.
Combustion: When a compound combines with oxygen gas to form water,
heat, and carbon dioxide
Concentration: A measurement of the amount of solute dissolved in a
liquid
Condensation: When a vapor reforms a liquid
Decomposition: When a big molecule falls apart to make two or littler
ones.
Diffusion: When particles move from areas of high concentration to areas
of low concentration.
Dilution: When you add solvent to a solution to make it less concentrated
Dipole moment: When a molecule has some charge separation
(usually because the molecule is polar), it's said to have a dipole
moment.
Dipole-dipole force: When the positive end of a polar molecule
becomes attracted to the negative end of another polar molecule.
Dissociation: When water dissolves a compound.
Distillation: This is when you separate a mixture of liquids by heating
it up.
Electrolysis: When electricity is used to break apart a chemical compound.
Electrolyte: An ionic compound that dissolves in water to conduct electricity.
Electron affinity: The energy change that accompanies the addition of an
electron to an atom in the gas phase.
Electro negativity: A measurement of how much an atom tends to steal
electrons from atoms that it's bonded to.
Electropositive: When something is not at all electronegative.
Endpoint: The point where you actually stop a titration, usually because an
indicator has changed color.
Enthalpy: A measurement of the energy content of a system.
Entropy: A measurement of the randomness in a system.
Excited state: A higher energy level that electrons can jump to when
energy is added.
Heterogeneous mixture: A mixture where the substances aren't equally
distributed.
Homogeneous mixture: A mixture that looks really "smooth" because
everything is mixed up really well.
Indicator: A compound that turns different colors at different pH values.
Le Chatlier's Principle: When you disturb equilibrium (by adding more
chemical, by heating it up, etc.), it will eventually go back into equilibrium
under a different set of conditions.
Redox reaction: A reaction that has both an oxidation and reduction.
Reversible reaction: A reaction in which the products can make reagents,
as well as the reagents making products.
Spontaneous change: A change that occurs by itself
Sublimation: When a solid can change directly into a gas. Dry ice does
this.
Theoretical yield: The amount of product which should be made in a
chemical reaction if everything goes perfectly.
VSEPR: A theory for predicting molecular shapes that assumes that
electrons like to be as far from each other as possible.
Classification of Chemistry
• Inorganic chemistry
• Organic chemistry
• Physical chemistry and
• Analytical chemistry
Inorganic chemistry is the study of all the elements and their
compounds with the exception of organic compounds and their
derivatives.
Oxides, sulphides and carbonates are from the important classes of
inorganic compounds.
Organic chemistry is the chemistry of hydrocarbons and their derivatives
with the exception of carbides, cyanides, carbon dioxide, carbon
monoxide, carbonates and hydrogen carbonates.
Perhaps the most remarkable feature of organic chemistry is that it is the
chemistry of carbon and a few other elements, chiefly, hydrogen, oxygen,
nitrogen, halogens and sulphur.
The major nutrients in the food comprises of organic compounds such as
carbohydrates, proteins, fats, vitamins, etc.
Physical chemistry is the study of physical properties of materials,
such as their thermal, electrical and magnetic behavior and their
interaction with electromagnetic fields.
It is concerned with interactions and transformations of materials.
Unlike other branches, it deals with the principles of physics
underlying all chemical interactions (e.g., gas laws), seeking to
measure, correlate, and explain the quantitative aspects of reactions.
Some important divisions of physical chemistry are thermodynamics,
spectroscopy, quantum chemistry, chemical kinetics and
electrochemistry.
Analytical chemistry is concerned with the development of theoretical
foundations and methods of chemical analyses.
It involves separating, identifying and determining the relative amount
of components in a sample of material.
The craft of Analytical Chemistry improving established methods,
extending existing methods to new types of samples, and developing new
methods for measuring chemical phenomena.
Chemical Equations/Reactions
It is a process by which one or more substances are changed into
one or more new substances.
Examples
Before After
H2 gas H2O liquid
and
O2 gas
Methane + Oxygen Carbon dioxide + Water
Word Equations
To write a word equation,
Write the names of the reactants to the left of the arrow
separated by plus signs;
Write the names of the products to the right of the arrow, also
separated by plus signs.
Reactant + Reactant Product + Product
Parts of a Chemical Reaction
Reactants Products
Reactants: Substances that are destroyed by the chemical change
(bonds break).
Products: Substances created by the chemical change (new bonds
form).
The arrow () is read as “yields”.
Translating Word Equations to Skeleton Equations
A skeleton equation uses chemical formulas rather than words to
identify the reactants and products of a chemical reaction.
The word equation
Iron (s) + chlorine (g) iron (III) chloride (s)
The skeleton equation
Fe(s) + Cl2(g) FeCl3 (s)
A skeleton equation is not yet “balanced” by coefficients!
Important Symbols
Balancing Chemical Equations
To write a balanced chemical equation,
1. Write the skeleton equation, and 2. Use coefficients to balance the
equation so that it obeys the law of conservation of mass.
During a chemical reaction, atoms are neither created nor destroyed
(Conservation of Mass). Remember you want the same number of
atoms of each element on each side of the equation.
Example
Hydrogen and oxygen react to form water. The reaction releases
enough energy to launch a rocket.
Write a balanced equation for the reaction.
Example
Hydrogen and oxygen gas react to form water:
H2 (g) + O2 (g) H2O (l)
What is wrong with this equation above? Doesn’t it appear that
one oxygen atom “went missing”?
According to conservation of mass, the proper way to write this
reaction is:
2H2 (g) + 1O2 (g) 2H2O (l)
The red coefficients represent the # of molecules (or the # of moles)
of each reactant or product.
Not All Properties are Conserved During Chemical
Reactions!
Conserved:
Not conserved:
Color
Mass
Physical state (solid, liquid, gas)
Types of atoms
Volume
Number of each atom
Number of moles of reactants/products
Exercice
Aluminum is a good choice for outdoor furniture as it reacts with
oxygen in the air to form a thin protective coat of aluminum oxide.
Balance the chemical equation.
Al(s) + O2(g) Al2O3(s)
Work by your own
Write a balanced chemical equation for the reaction in which
sodium hydroxide and calcium bromide react to produce solid
calcium hydroxide and sodium bromide. (The reaction occurs in
water.)
NaOH(aq)+CaBr2(aq) Ca(OH)2(s)+NaBr(aq)
The five types of chemical reactions
Synthesis
Combustion Decomposition
Chemical
Reactions
Double Single
Replacem Replacem
ent ent
Stoichiometry
The study of chemical change is at the heart of chemistry
Stoichiometry, a term derived from the Ancient Greek words
• Stoicheion element
• Metron measure
Therefore it is an area of study that examines the quantity of
substances consumed and produced in a chemical reaction.
Stoichiometry is about measuring the amounts of elements and
compounds involved in a reaction.
Stoichiometry built on an understanding of atomic masses,
formulas, and the law of conservation of mass.
Atoms are neither created nor destroyed (i.e., not dealing with
nuclear reactions).
Consider the chemical equation:
4NH3 + 5O2 6H2O + 4NO
With Stoichiometry we find out that
[Link]
is what we call a mole ratio.
1. How many moles of H2O are produced if 2.00 moles of O2 are
used?
2. How many moles of NO are produced in the reaction if 15 mol of
H2O are also produced?
4NH3 + 5O2 6H2O + 4NO
Notice that a correctly balanced equation is essential to get the
right answer
Limiting and Excess Reagents
Limiting reagent: finished at the end of the product is produced.
Excess reagent: remains left over after the product is produced.
Example
Thermochemistry
Thermochemistry – studies the changes in energy that occur in
chemical reactions.
The change in energy that accompanies a chemical reaction is
represented as H.
Heat (Enthalpy) change, H; is the amount of heat energy released or
absorbed during a process.
Exothermic and Endothermic Processes
Exothermic Processes
Processes in which energy is released as it proceeds, and surroundings
become warmer
Reactants Products + energy
Endothermic Processes
Processes in which energy is absorbed as it proceeds, and
surroundings become colder
Reactants + energy Products
Phase Change Diagram
Processes occur by addition of energy
Processes occur by removal of energy
Chromatography Mobile phase
It uses to separate components sample
(solutes) in a sample mixture More
interaction with
based on their interaction with the stationary phase
Stationary phase
mobile and stationary phases.
Stationary phase (solid or liquid)-
More
retain the substances within the interaction with
mobile phase
column.
Mobile phase (gas or liquid)-
transport substances through the
Mobile phase
column.
Chromatography can be;
• Thin layer chromatography (TLC)
• Liquid chromatography (LC)
• Gas chromatography (GC)
TLC
Chromatography carried out on active
particulate material (silica gel or alumina)
dispersed on an Inert support (flat glass
plates)
TLC can be used to check sample purity.
LC
High Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC)
Mobile phase is a liquid and stationary phase can be liquid or solid
Sample must be soluble in mobile phase
Instrumentation of HPLC
HPLC Detector
Characteristics of typical HPLC detectors
Detectors Response Sensitivity
(ng/mL)
Refractive index Universal 1000
Conductimetric Selective 100
UV/visible absorption Selective 10
Mass-spectrometry Selective 0.1
Fluorescence Selective 0.001
GC
It uses for separation of volatile substances, or substances that can
be made volatile; sample should be volatile.
The mobile phase is gas and the stationary phase can be liquid or
solid.
The mobile phase (carrier gas) should be chemically inert, dry
and free from O2 (helium, argon, nitrogen and hydrogen).
Instrumentation of GC
GC Detectors
Thermal conductivity detector (TCD)
Flame ionization detector (FID)
Nitrogen phosphorous detectors (NPD)
Spectroscopy
Spectroscopy involves the study of light that is absorbed or
emitted by a substance.
Spectroscopy
Interaction of light or electromagnetic radiation with matter
(atom, molecule and ion)
When radiation meets matter, the radiation is either
absorbed, emitted, or scattered.
• Absorption- light is absorbed
• Emission- light is emitted or released
• Scattering- light is dispersed
In absorption spectroscopy- an electromagnetic radiation is
absorbed by an atom or molecule, which undergoes transition
from a lower energy state to a higher energy or excited state.
In emission spectroscopy- atoms or molecules first absorb energy
and then emits this energy as light.
Scattering spectroscopy measures certain physical properties by
measuring the amount of light that a matter scatters at certain
wavelengths (Raman spectroscopy).
Further when radiation interacts with matter a number of processes
can occur:
• Transmission- light is allowed to pass through
• Reflection- light is reflected or bounced away
• Diffraction- shows wave nature
• Refraction- shows particle nature
• Interference- light is disturbed
• Polarization- light vibration is restricted to one direction
Spectrophotometer
Measures absorbance or transmittance of
light, as a function of wavelength
General procedure:
Cuvette
• Sample is placed into cuvette
• Light of selected wavelength (λmax)
is passed through sample
• Instrument measures the amount of light
absorbed by the sample
Spectrophotometer
Beer’s Law
Describes the relationship between the absorbance of a solution,
and its concentration:
“The amount of light absorbed is proportional to the concentration of
the solution.”
Solution concentration
A=εLc
(mol/L)
Absorbance
Molar absorptivity constant Length of path traveled by
(depends on combination of light
solute/solvent/λ)
Exercise
The molar absorptivity of ethanal in hexane at its λmax is 15 Lcm-1mol-1.
Calculate the concentration of ethanal in a solution that has an
absorbance of 0.652 with a path length of 1.2 cm.
Role of Chemistry in Society
Applications of chemical science have contributed significantly to the
advancement of human civilization.
Chemists were considered a societal problem solver. They synthesized
crop enhancing agricultural chemicals to ensure a constant and viable
food supply.
They played a significant role in the eradication of deadly diseases by
developing life saving pharmaceuticals and chemical pesticides.
Industries Based on Chemistry Science
Chemicals:
• Agricultural chemicals
• Electronic reagents
• Paints and solvents
• Petrochemical feed stocks
• Pharmaceuticals
• Soaps and detergents
Industries Based on Chemistry Science…
Materials:
• Ceramics
• Glass
• Metals and alloys
• Paper
• Plastics and rubbers
• Synthetic fibers
Skills needed for Chemistry laboratory practices
Laboratory work is an established part of courses in chemistry in higher
education.
The original reasons for its development lay in the need to produce
skilled technicians for industry and highly competent workers for
research laboratories.
Chemistry is an experimental science that combines academic study with
the acquisition of practical and investigatory skills.
Major skills in lab environment
Skills in the safe handling of chemical materials
Skills required for conducting the standard laboratory procedures
Skills in monitoring, by observation and measurement, of chemical
properties, events or changes, and the systematic and reliable recording
and documentation thereof.
Competence in planning, design and execution of practical
investigations, from the problem recognition stage to the evaluation and
appraisal of results and findings; this includes the ability to select
appropriate techniques and procedures.
Major skills in lab environment…
Skills in the operation of standard chemical instrumentation
Ability to interpret data derived from laboratory observations and
measurements in terms of their significance and the theory
underlying them.
Ability to conduct risk assessments concerning the use of chemical
substances and laboratory procedures.
Chemistry Laboratory Apparatus
Laboratory equipment comprises different sets of apparatus, which are
designed to perform various tasks in the laboratory.
On the basis of their use, these apparatus can be broadly classified into
three categories:
1. Reaction vessels, e.g., Beakers, flasks, boiling tubes and test tubes.
2. Measuring equipments, e.g., Pipettes, burettes, balances and
thermometers
3. Support and heating devices, e.g. Stand and clamp, tripod and gauze,
and Bunsen burner.
Chemistry Laboratory Apparatus …
Chemistry Laboratory Apparatus …
Chemistry Laboratory Apparatus …
Chemistry Laboratory Safety Rules
Chemistry laboratory may be considered as a place of discovery and
learning.
However, by the nature of laboratory work, it can be a place of danger if
proper common sense precautions are not taken.
It is your duty to take reasonable care for your own health and safety and
that of others working in the laboratory.
Therefore, it is essential that the students are taught what can go wrong,
how to prevent such events from occurring, and what to do in case of an
emergency.
Chemistry Laboratory Safety Rules…
• Protect your eyes
• Wear appropriate protective
• Wear shoes that cover your feet
• Tie back loose hair
• Don't eat and drink in the laboratory
• Don't smell chemicals
• Don't pipette out solutions by mouth!
General precautions
Wash your hands with soap and water before leaving the laboratory
even if you have been wearing gloves.
Know the hazards of the materials being used.
When lighting the Bunsen burner, first light the match stick then turn
on the gas.
Know how to interpret data from a MSDS (Material Safety Data
Sheets).
Read the labels on the reagent bottles carefully to make sure that you
are using the right chemical.
Never add water to concentrated acid solutions
General precautions…
If you get any chemical in your eye, immediately wash the eye with the
eye- wash fountain and notify the teacher.
Work with volatile chemicals under a fume hood.
Get aware with the location and proper usage of the safety equipments
like eye wash fountain, safety shower, fire extinguisher, emergency exits.
Carry out only the experiments assigned by your teacher.
Use equipment only as directed.
General precautions…
Never place chemicals directly on the pan balances.
Add boiling chips to liquid to be boiled
Check glassware for stars or cracks.
Never use laboratory glassware for eating or drinking purposes.
Never remove chemicals from the laboratory.
Never work alone in the laboratory. In case of a problem, you may
need another person to prevent injury or even save your life!
Demonstrate safe behavior
Obey all safety instructions given by your teacher or found in your
experimental procedure.
Clean up spills immediately if you know. If you are uncertain how to
clean up a spill or if a large spill occurs, notify your teacher
immediately.
Before leaving the lab, be sure to replace the lids to all containers,
return equipment and chemicals to their proper places and clean up
your work area.
Know how to dispose off waste. Dispose off all waste materials
according to your instructional procedure or your teacher’s
instructions.
Remember!
The lab is a place for serious work! Careless behavior may endanger
yourself and others and will not be tolerated!
Writing a Laboratory Report
The purpose of writing laboratory experiment is to give practice in
writing laboratory reports that answer the general questions:
• What did you do?
• Why did you do it?
• How did you do it?
• What happened?
Writing a Laboratory Report…
• A laboratory report is a written composition of the results of an
experiment.
• It should be written precisely and clearly, using good grammar and
punctuation. Each report contains:
• Title
• Objective
• Theory
• Materials Used
• Procedure
• Observation
• Results
• Discussion And
• Conclusion.
End of Chapter One.
Thank you!