Our tutors come from top universities
Our online chemistry private tuition is created to align with the chemistry curriculum, ensuring a focused approach to course content. Tutors highlight practical applications, exam techniques, and strategies through mock papers, ensuring students are thoroughly prepared for assessments.
Topics
What will your Chemistry Tutor teach you?
Fundamental Chemistry
Atomic Structure
Atom construction, including protons, neutrons, and electrons, and the shells of an atom.
Periodic Table
The organisation of the periodic table, why elements are placed where they are, and atomic size and electronegativity
Chemical Bonding
Covalent and Ionic bonds and the role of electrons in the respective elements
Chemical Reactions
How reactants are transformed into products through breaking and forming bonds and rearrange atoms
Acids and Bases
The roles of acids and bases in solutions and how they are identified using hte pH scale
Chemical Properties
Chemical Changes
Indicators of chemical changes and the formation of new substances; reversible reactions and mechanisms for changes
Redox Reactions
Oxidation involving the loss and gain of electrons: OIL RIG meaning Oxidation is loss, reduction is gain
Reaction Rates
What affects the rates of reaction: concentration, temperature, catalysts, and collision theory
Energy Changes
What exothermic and endothermic reactions are and how they react in the environment. Measuring Enthalpy.
Types of Reactions
Definitions and traits of combustion, precipitation, and displacement reactions
Chemical Calculations
Moles and Avogadro's Number
Understanding that a mole represents a number of particles and how to use the number to convert to grams
Stoichiometry
How to balance chemical equations to help determine mole ratios between reactants and products
Concentration and Dilution
How to calculate concentration given volume of solution and dilution
Gas Laws
Understanding Boyle's Law and Charle's Law and how to use them in examination questions
Limiting Reactants
How to determine the limiting reactant and how it determines the amount of product formed