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Undergraduate physical chemistry final examination topics 1. Specification of a thermodynamic system. Postulates (axioms) of thermodynamics. Entropy, energy, work and heat. Equilibrium in isolated and isentropic systems. Laws of classical thermodynamics. 2. Entropy- and energy-based fundamental equations. Equations of state. Energy- and entropy-based intensive variables. Equilibrium in isobaric, isothermal and isobaricisothermal systems. Equilibrium conditions in terms of intensive and extensive quantities. 3. Mathematical formalism of thermodynamics. Fundamental equations for the functions S, U, H, F and G; derivatives of the relevant functions. Euler formula, Gibbs-Duhem equation, Maxwell relations, Gibbs-Helmholtz equation. 4. Basic principles of statistical thermodynamics. Probability distribution function of the energy and partition function on microcanonical and canonical ensembles. Calculation of canonical partition function using molecular contributions. Calculation of thermodynamic quantities (S, U, H and F) from partition functions. 5. Phase equilibria. Gibbs phase rule and its application. Phase stability and phase diagrams of pure components. Equilibrium and phase diagrams of binary systems. Equilibrium and phase diagrams of multicomponent systems. Construction of phase diagrams from experimental data. Separation of components based on phase diagrams. 6. Ideal and real mixtures. Fugacity, activity and related standard quantities. Colligative properties (freezing point depression, boiling point elevation, vapour pressure depression, osmosis); characterisation of related equilibria. 7. Chemical equilibrium in reactive systems. Equilibrium constant and related standard quantities of reactions. Temperature- and pressure dependence of the equilibrium constant. Calculation of the equilibrium constant on a canonical ensemble. 8. Transport phenomena. The general linear transport equation and its application for diffusion and viscous flow. Transport phenomena in electrolyte solutions (diffusion, diffusion potential, electric conduction). 9. Collision theory of chemical reactions. Transition state theory for bimolecular and unimolecular reactions. General mass-action equations for elementary reactions, their solution. Experimental determination of the order of reaction. Temperature and pressure dependence of the reaction rate constant. 10. Reaction mechanisms. Methods to solve the system of kinetic equations for composite reactions. Steady-state approximation and its applicability. Chain reactions. 11. Catalysis and inhibition. Autocatalysis, autoinhibition and their detection based on the change of reaction order. Acid-base catalysis. Kinetics of heterogeneous reactions; heterogeneous catalysis. 12. Detectors, sensors and measuring devices. Control and regulation. Data collection and regulation using computers. 13. Application of different optical methods to study equilibria and kinetics of chemical reactions. 14. Thermodynamics of systems containing electrically charged particles (electroneutrality principle, electrochemical potential, mean activity of ions, Born formula of solvation, Debye-Hückel limiting law). Thermodynamic description of galvanic cells. Characterisation and classification of electrodes. 15. Electrochemical power sources, electrolysis. Electrochemical corrosion and corrosion protection. 16. Application of different electrochemical methods to study thermodynamic equilibria and kinetics of chemical reactions. 17. Basic principles of quantum mechanics: physical quantities, their measurement, state functions, expectation values. The Schrödinger equation. Stationary states, simultaneous measurement of physical quantities, the Heisenberg uncertainty principle. 18. Quantum mechanical description of a hydrogen atom: solving the stationary Schrödinger equation (calculating energies and eigenfunctions); degeneration, visualisation of orbitals and electron densities. The spin of the electron. 19. Quantum mechanical description of multielectron systems: Hamiltonian, stationary Schrödinger equation, independent electron model (IEM), Pauli principle, Slater determinant. Electronic structure of multielectron systems: orbitals, energy of orbitals, Aufbau principle, electron configuration. Characterisation of atomic states and their notation. Hund’s rules. 20. Electronic structure of molecules, their Hamiltonian. The orbitals of H + ion. LCAO-MO 2 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. approximation. Structure of the H2 molecule using VB and MO model. Electronic structure of general diatomic molecules. Electronic structure of the water molecule using VB and MO model: canonical and localised orbitals; hybrid orbitals. Theoretical background of chemical structure determination. Principles of spectroscopic methods. Different methods depending on energy, on the molecular modes. Interpretation of simple spectra. Rotational and vibrational spectroscopy. Description of a diatomic molecule as a rigid rotor; energy levels and selection rules. Different types of spinning tops. Applications of rotational spectroscopy. Classical and quantum mechanical description of a diatomic molecule as a harmonic oscillator; energy levels and selection rules. Generalisation to multiatomic molecules’ vibration. Internal coordinates and normal coordinates. Role of symmetry. Applications in IR and Raman spectroscopy. Electron spectroscopy: principles of UV and visible spectroscopy; selection rules, vibrational fine structure. Practical applications: excitation decay phenomena, fluorescence and phosphorescence. Principles of photoionisation spectroscopy; selection rules. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (ESCA). NMR and ESR spectroscopy. Quantum mechanical description of magnetic properties of particles. Nuclear spin and the principle of NMR spectroscopy. Qualitative properties of NMR spectra; chemical shift and spin-spin coupling. ESR spectroscopy and its practical applications. Excess surface energy and its thermodynamic consequences. Surface tension. Pressure at curved interfaces. Equilibrium vapour pressure of droplets. Solubility of small solid particles. Thermodynamics of interfaces according to Gibbs. Gibbs adsorption equation and its practical applications. Capillary active and capillary inactive substances. Adsorption isotherms. Equation of state of an adsorbed surface layer. Classical (DLVO) theory of colloid stability. Coagulation kinetics. Effect of the electrolyte concentration on the rate of coagulation. Sedimentation, isothermal recrystallisation and aggregation. Association colloids and the formation of micelles. The hydrophobic interaction. Micelle mixtures. Solubilisation; formation of polymer-surfactant complexes. Macromolecular colloids; solutions of polymers. Random coil structure of polymer molecules. Polymer gels and polyelectrolytes. Basics of rheology. Deformation types and their explanation based on material structure. Rubber elasticity.