Organic chemistry help

Organic chemistry help

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08/01/2026

✨ Master Organic Chemistry – UK Students Welcome! ✨
(یا Urdu-English mix: 🌟 Organic Chemistry Seekhain – UK Students ke liye 🌟)
📋 Introduction / First Lines:
السلام علیکم! 👋
I’m offering 1-on-1 Organic Chemistry tutoring for A-Level, University & HSC students.
Learn complex topics easily and boost your exam scores!
🧪 Topics Covered / Bullet Points:
Reaction Mechanisms 🧪
Aromatic Chemistry & Functional Groups ⚛️
Stereochemistry & Isomerism 🔬
Exam Tips & Problem-Solving 📘
Why Choose Me / Benefits:
Experienced with UK syllabus students 🇬🇧
Quick, easy-to-understand explanations
Flexible online sessions
Support in English & Urdu
📩 Call to Action / DM Message:
DM me now to book your session or ask questions!
(For urgent help, reply to this post or message me directly!)

08/01/2026

08/01/2026

24/12/2025

Celebrating my 2nd year on Facebook. Thank you for your continuing support. I could never have made it without you. 🙏🤗🎉

08/12/2025

🧪 Organic Chemistry Help | NEET / JEE / BSc / MSc

Post Content:

Organic Chemistry tough lagti hai?
Yahan milega sab kuch ek hi jagah:

✅ Short & smart notes
✅ Important name reactions (with mechanism)
✅ PYQs analysis (NEET, JEE, BSc, MSc)
✅ Practice questions & doubts discussion
✅ Tricks to remember reagents, reagioselectivity, stereochemistry & more

Humara aim hai ki Organic Chemistry ko simple, logical aur exam‑oriented banaya jaaye – chahe aap school student ho, NEET/JEE aspirant, ya college level (BSc/MSc).
Page ko Follow karo aur Share karo apne doston ke saath jo Organic Chemistry se struggle kar rahe hain.

Credits:
Content & Notes by: Organic Chemistry Help
For doubts: Comment below ya DM karein.


Photos from Organic chemistry help's post 04/12/2025

One quick organic chemistry tip:

Lower pKa = stronger acid.
Stronger acid = more stable conjugate base.

So to compare acidity, ask yourself:
“Which conjugate base is more stable?”

This one idea helps in many AP, A‑Level, and college organic questions.

Save this post so you remember it during revision.

Photos from Organic chemistry help's post 04/12/2025

US students:

Struggling with AP Chemistry or college organic chemistry?

I help students with:

Mechanisms (SN1, SN2, E1, E2, additions, substitutions)
Resonance and aromaticity
pKa, acids/bases, and stability
Stereochemistry (R/S, E/Z)
Exam strategies for multiple choice and free‑response questions
If you have a test coming up, send me a message with your syllabus or topics, and I’ll guide you on what to focus on first.

Photos from Organic chemistry help's post 04/12/2025

How to study organic chemistry the right way:

Understand electron movement first
Learn where electrons are, what is δ+ and δ–, nucleophile vs electrophile.

Learn patterns, not just reactions
For example: “Nucleophilic substitution”, “electrophilic addition”, “elimination”.

Practice mechanisms daily
Draw full arrows, intermediates, and products.

Use spaced repetition
Revisit reactions after 1 day, 3 days, 1 week, 2 weeks.
Teach one reaction to a friend
If you can explain it, you truly understand it.

If you want a 7‑day organic chemistry study plan, comment “STUDY PLAN”

Photos from Organic chemistry help's post 04/12/2025

5 common mistakes students make in organic chemistry exams:

Forgetting charges on intermediates and products
Drawing the arrow from the wrong place (it should start at electrons, not atoms)
Ignoring stereochemistry when it matters
Not showing lone pairs where required
Mixing up nucleophiles and electrophiles
Examiners in A‑Level, AP, and college orgo love mechanism questions. Small mistakes = lost marks.

Comment “MISTAKES” if you want a checklist of what to always double‑check before you move to the next question.

Photos from Organic chemistry help's post 04/12/2025

Organic naming (IUPAC) starts simple.

Alkanes (no double or triple bonds):

1 carbon = methane
2 carbons = ethane
3 carbons = propane
4 carbons = butane
5 carbons = pentane
6 carbons = hexane

Tip: For A‑Level, GCSE, AP, or college organic chemistry, you MUST be fast at naming and drawing these.

Save this post, then try drawing:
butane
pentane
hexane
If you want a full IUPAC naming guide (alkanes, alkenes, alkynes, substituents), comment “NAMING”.

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