Lecture Description
Recorded on November 3, 2014.
Index of Topics:
01:21-Metals, Semiconductors, and Insulators
03:54-The Fermi Level
06:25-Mobile Charges in Pure Semiconductors
09:19-Common Semiconductors
12:14-Doping of Semiconductors
17:52-Doping
20:40-p-n junctions
34:03-Solar Cells
40:12-Photodiodes
43:00-LEDs and Laser Diodes
48:56-Chapter 7 Summary
Course Index
- Symmetry in Nature
- Symmetry and Point Groups
- Representations and Character Tables
- Character Tables and One Application of Symmetry
- A Second Application of Symmetry
- Simple MO Theory
- Simple MO Theory II
- Simple MO Theory III
- Simple MO Theory IV
- Projection Operator Method
- The Crystalline Solid State
- Crystal Structures
- Ionic Structures
- Semiconductors and Devices based on p-n Junctions
- Models of Acid- Base Chemistry
- Nature of the Adduct
- Chemistry of the Main Group Elements: Hydrogen, Alkali, and Alkaline Earth Metals
- .Chemistry of the Main Group Elements: Boron through Nitrogen Groups
- Chemistry of the Main Group Elements: Carbon Group through Noble Gases
- .Chemistry of the Main Group Elements: Chalcogens through Noble Gases
- Coordination Chemistry I: Names, Coordination Geometries and Isomers
- Coordination Chemistry I: Coordination Geometries
- Coordination Chemistry II: Liquid Field Theory
- Coordination Chemistry II: Liquid Field Theory
- Coordination Chemistry II: LFT for Electron Counting
- Coordination Chemistry III: Spectroscopy & Multi-Electron States
- Coordination Chemistry III: Multi-Electron States
- Coordination Chemistry III: Multi-Electron States -- Part 2
- Inorganic Chemistry: Jahn-Teller Effect and Electron Counting
Course Description
This course is an introduction to modern inorganic chemistry. Topics include principles of structure, bonding, and chemical reactivity with application to compounds of the main group and transition elements, including organometallic chemistry.
Inorganic Chemistry (Chem 107) is part of OpenChem: http://ocw.uci.edu/collections/open_chemistry.html
This video is part of a 29-lecture undergraduate-level course titled "Inorganic Chemistry" taught at UC Irvine by Professor Matthew D. Law.