Thomas Hofstetter: Catalogue data in Spring Semester 2019 |
Name | PD Dr. Thomas Hofstetter |
Field | Umweltchemie |
Address | I. f. Biogeochemie/Schadstoffdyn. Eawag Ueberlandstrasse 133 8600 Dübendorf SWITZERLAND |
Telephone | +41 58 765 50 76 |
thomas.hofstetter@env.ethz.ch | |
Department | Environmental Systems Science |
Relationship | Privatdozent |
Number | Title | ECTS | Hours | Lecturers | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
701-1314-00L | Environmental Organic Chemistry | 3 credits | 2V | K. McNeill, T. Hofstetter, M. Sander | |
Abstract | This course is focused on environmental transformation reactions of organic chemical contaminants. An overview of important fate processes of organic pollutants will be given, along with a discussion of the factors that determine pathways and rates of transformation reactions. Special emphasis will be given to redox transformations, photochemical reactions, and enzyme-catalyzed processes. | ||||
Learning objective | The students will - further their knowledge of important classes of environmentally relevant organic compounds - become familiar with the tools for studying reaction mechanisms - learn the fundamentals of environmental photochemistry - obtain a detailed understanding of redox reactions of pollutants and biogeochemically important species - get a survey of important enzymatic transformations - learn to critically evaluate published data | ||||
Content | - Methods and tools used in the study of reaction mechanisms and kinetics - Environmental photochemistry, including direct and indirect photolysis - Redox properties of important environmental phases and redox reactions of organic pollutants - Enzyme-catalyzed reactions involved in environmentally important enzymatic processes | ||||
Lecture notes | Materials that are needed beyond the required text will be distributed in the lecture. | ||||
Literature | Schwarzenbach, R.P., P.M. Gschwend, and D.M. Imboden. Environmental Organic Chemistry. 3rd Ed. Wiley, New York (2016). | ||||
Prerequisites / Notice | Introduction to Environmental Organic Chemistry, Bachelor 5th semester, M. Sander, K. McNeill |