This experiment we used a compound I'm very familiar with from work: acac! It was used to synthesize chromium and manganese metal complexes. Despite being very familiar with acac and this lab using very simple techniques (double boiler being the hardest thing to set up) it was somehow extremely difficult to get right, and a very minuscule yield was collected for both metal complexes, less than 3% in both cases. However, it was nice to learn to use magnetic susceptibility balances.
This was our first experiment and I was unsure what to expect; this chemistry lab was much longer in class length than any other and that was kind of intimidating. It was also my first physical class since the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic. However, things ended up going relatively smoothly due to precautions and other measures taken by the UCF staff such as measuring our temperatures before entering the building, ensuring we wear our masks, and handing us experimental kits that are disinfected between uses. While it did take long and the product wasn't completely pure, we did end up succesfully synthesizing two different Cobalt-mimt complexes. This experiment yielded a really clean FTIR spectra that was easy to break down to see different functional groups and contaminants, which was really a really good skill to sharpen up early in the semester as it would come to help with every single lab after this. A 75% yield was impressive, bu...

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