Title: Badger Electrochemists
1Badger Electrochemists
Leslie J. Lyons Department of Chemistry Grinnell
College Grinnell, Iowa 50112
2CongratulationsAlanah!
3Outline
- Badger Electrochemists (1952 - present)
- Analytical Chemistry at Grinnell
- Teaching Introductory and Advanced
- Research Silicon Electrolytes for Lithium
Battery Applications - Acknowledgements
4Badger Electrochemistry Home
This photograph, from 1978, shows the Daniels
building from the northeast, on the corner of
University Avenue and Mills Street. Photo
courtesy of UW-Madison University Communications.
5Shain Chemistry Research Tower
Irving Shain Photos courtesy of UW-Madison
University Communications.
6The Shain Tower Dedication
7Primitive cyclic voltammetry in 1963.
Students in the laboratory in 1962 (L to R) R.
Nicholson, B. Schwarz, B. K. Hovsepiar, and D.
Polcyn
Photos courtesy of Irving Shain and UW Dept. of
Chemistry
8NanoBucky
Sarah Baker Grinnell 01 UW 06
http//hamers.chem.wisc.edu/research/nanofibers/in
dex2.htm
9Teaching Analytical Chemistry at Grinnell
- CHM 130 Inorganic and Analytical Chemistry
- Texts Daniel Harris, Exploring Chemical
Analysis, 3rd Ed. and Luther Erickson, Water
Module Guidebook - CHM 358 Instrumental Analysis
- Text Skoog, Holler, Nieman, Principles of
Instrumental Analysis, 5th Ed.
10Instrumental Analysis Electrochemistry Labs
- Iodide Ion Selective Electrode
- Polarography of Pb
- Anodic Stripping Voltammetry
- Cyclic Voltammetry
- Rotating Ring Disk Voltammetry
- Impedance Spectroscopy
- Spectroelectrochemistry
11CHM 130 Text Topics
- Review of Monoprotic Acid/Base Equilibria
- Titrations and Buffers
- Polyprotic Acids
- Activity
- Spectrophotometry and Atomic Spectroscopy
- Transition Metal and Coordination Chemistry
- Chromatography and Mass Spectrometry
- Nuclear Chemistry
12Water Module Overview
- 5 weeks of lab 4 weeks of class
- Question driven discussion of solubility
equilibria, carbonate equilibria, atomic
spectroscopy, and electrochemistry - Lab analyses of drinking water from around the
country with Grinnell, Chicago, Des Moines, and
bottled water providing benchmarks - Lab concludes with student poster presentations
13Water Module Class Sessions (Week 1)
- Session 1. Formulating the Questions and
Limiting the Exploration Focus on Ionic
Composition - Session 2. Dissolved Ionic Solids Which ionic
salts are present in typical water samples and
how did they get there? - Session 3. Major species vs. minor species Why
are so many different concentration units
employed to describe concentration levels of the
several species present in water samples?
14Water Module Class Sessions (Week 2)
- Session 4. Carbon dioxide and dissolved
carbonates Why do virtually all fresh water
samples contain bicarbonate as a principal
species? - Session 5. Hard water What is meant by hard
water and why does degree of hardness matter? - Session 6. Sodium and yellow flames How can we
determine how much sodium is in the water?
15Water Module Class Sessions (Week 3)
- Session 7. Galvanic Cells and Ion
Concentrations How can galvanic cells be used
to determine ion concentrations? - Session 8. Potentiometric Titrations How do
ion concentrations change in the course of a
titration? - Session 9. Ion-Selective Electrodes and ppm
Concentrations How can we determine ion
concentrations at the 1 ppm level?
16Water Module Class Sessions (Week 4)
- Session 10. Conservation of Mass and Charge
Does it all add up? (including poster
preparation) - Session 11. What does it all mean? What does
the complete chemical analysis reveal about the
source and treatment of our water samples? - Session 12. Exam
17Water Module Laboratory
- L1. pH and Alkalinity by Potentiometric
Titration with HCl - L2. Water Hardness (Total and Ca) by EDTA
Titration - L3. Chloride by Potentiometric Titration with
Silver Nitrate - L4. Sodium Determination by Atomic Emission
Measurements - L5. Nitrate by Potentiometry with Ion Selective
Electrode - L6. Fluoride by Potentiometry with Ion Selective
Electrode - L7. Total Dissolved Solids by Electrical
Conductivity
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20Water Module Student Data
Gillis, Goodwin-Kucinsky, Patnaik, Peters, and
Yohannes
21Silicon Electrolytes for Lithium Battery
Applications
Grinnell College
Quallion, LLC Sylmar, CA
Lithium Battery Group Argonne National Laboratory
22In the News
- RD 100 Award, September, 2005
- Scientists craft lithium batteries
- by John Potratz
- Badger Herald Wednesday, October 5, 2005
- New battery stimulates damaged nerves
- By ASTARA MARCH
- Science Daily, Oct. 3, 2005
23Linear Polysiloxane Ionic Conductivities
LiTFSI
Macromolecules, 2001, 34, 931-934.
24Cross-linked Polysiloxane Gel Electrolytes
?
Macromolecules, 2003, 36, 9176.
25Liquid Siloxane Electrolytes
Chem. Mater., 2006, 18, 1289.
26Atlanta ACS Meeting
27VT Conductivities of 1NMx/LiTFSI
28NMR Studies of Electrolytes
1NM3
29Acknowledgements Grinnell College
- Marie Mapes Douglas Schumacher
- Felipe Bautista Jay Jin
- David Clipson Kate Morcom
- Yanika Schneider Jacob Barrera
- Lori Cooke Scott Harring
- Megan Straughan James Taggart
- T. Andrew Mobley
- NSF-REU, NSF-MRI (2), HHMI, Grinnell College
- 3M
- Luther E. Erickson, The Water Module Guidebook
30Acknowledgements Organosilicon Research Center
- Robert West
- David Moline
- Richard Hooper
- Qinzheng Wang
- David Sherlock
- Ryan West
- Zhengcheng Zhang
- Nicholas A. A. Rossi
- Lingzhi Zhang
-
- UW University-Industry Relations Grant
- NIST-ATP