Chemistry 3B - Lecture 03: Electronic Spectroscopy

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Chemistry 3B: Chemical Structure and Reactivity. Spring 2006. Professor Peter Vollhardt. Chemistry 3B represents the second semester of the standard organic chemistry series at UC Berkeley. It covers conjugation, aromatic chemistry, carbonyl compounds, carbohydrates, amines, carboxylic acids, amino acids, peptides, proteins, and nucleic acid chemistry. Ultraviolet spectroscopy and mass spectrometry will be introduced. Organic chemistry is a specific discipline within the subject of chemistry. It is the scientific study of the structure, properties, composition, reactions, and preparation of chemical compounds of carbon and hydrogen, which may contain any number of other elements, such as nitrogen,...

Channel: Education
Uploaded: August 20, 2007 at 9:24 pm
Author: ucberkeley

Length: 1:14:54
Rating: 4.68
Views: 30,910

Tags: Education chem 3b webcast uc berkeley cal chemistry course class

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Video Comments:
mehdan2 (Sunday 16th of November 2008 07:00:28 PM)
I think this is in Latimer 102. Cool place.
charliepeke (Sunday 20th of July 2008 06:20:36 AM)
U.C. Berkeley is Pac 10. Their academic and sports rival is Stanford, which is also Pac 10.
charliepeke (Sunday 20th of July 2008 06:19:43 AM)
Yes. The Ivy League is actually an athletic league, like the Pac 10 or Big 10. Berkeley is more prestigious than many Ivy League schools. Maybe I'm showing my Alum pride, but you can check the academic reputation in U.S. News and World Report.
Associatedfan (Sunday 22nd of June 2008 07:16:14 PM)
UCB where is lecture 1 and 2 ?
luvmonkey666 (Friday 23rd of May 2008 12:05:29 AM)
could someone tell me how i can seperate NaCl (salt) to just get Cl and then maybe make it into a liquid for cheap pool chlorine
azngamer828 (Thursday 24th of July 2008 01:50:53 PM)
I am not sure if this is right. But dont you mix it with water to make NaCl dissolve making the Na fuse with OH. I wasnt sure if thats rite. sorry
ItamiHikari (Wednesday 29th of October 2008 01:07:11 PM)
I guess you could dissolve it in water and then use electrolysis to gather Cl-anions at the cathode... there is an electrolytic cell on the market which is especially made for cleaning salt water swimming pools. It works marvelously. Maybe you can try that out...?
Jacknast08 (Wednesday 5th of November 2008 02:45:01 PM)
Maybe electrochemically. But it is much cheaper to just buy the stuff
luvmonkey666 (Wednesday 5th of November 2008 07:51:33 PM)
well bags of salt are alot cheaper than pool chlorine
tinobeanoweano (Tuesday 29th of April 2008 03:23:01 PM)
Brilliant , Just Brilliant ! !!