Course: Physico-Chemical Methods of Study of Coordination Compounds

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Course title Physico-Chemical Methods of Study of Coordination Compounds
Course code AFC/PGSFS
Organizational form of instruction Lecture
Level of course Doctoral
Year of study not specified
Semester Winter and summer
Number of ECTS credits 20
Language of instruction Czech, English
Status of course unspecified
Form of instruction Face-to-face
Work placements This is not an internship
Recommended optional programme components None
Lecturer(s)
  • Kuchár Juraj, doc. RNDr. Ph.D.
Course content
Obligatory examination for all students. Knowledge of basic physico-chemical methods (UV/VIS, IR, Raman, Mössbauer, NMR and mass spectroscopies, magnetochemistry, X-ray diffraction, thermal analysis, conductometry) is required.

Learning activities and teaching methods
Lecture
  • Attendace - 26 hours per semester
Learning outcomes
The lecture Physico-chemical methods of study of complex compounds is designed for PhD study of inorganic chemistry and it is focused to modern methods with accent to X-ray structure analysis.
Describe advanced physical-chemistry measurements methods for the study of chemical compounds (X-ray analysis, NMR, IR, UV-VIS, Moessbauer and mass spectroscopy, magnetochemical and conductivity measurements, thermal analysis.
Prerequisites
basic knoweledges of coordination chemistry

Assessment methods and criteria
Oral exam

Recommended literature
  • Hatakeyama, T., Liu, Z. (1998). Handbook of thermal analysis. J. Wiley & Sons, New York.
  • Henderson, W., Mc Indoe, J. S. (2005). Mass spectrometry of inorganic, coordination and organometallic compounds. J. Wiley & Sons.
  • Kahn, O. (1995). Molecular magnetism. VCH Publ.
  • Kalous, V. a kol. (1987). Metody chemického výzkumu. SNTL Praha.
  • Lever, A. B. P. (1984). Inorganic Electronic Spectroscopy. Elsevier, Amsterdam.
  • Prosser, V. a kol. (1989). Experimentální metody biofyziky. Academia Praha.


Study plans that include the course
Faculty Study plan (Version) Category of Branch/Specialization Recommended year of study Recommended semester