NCERT 2025–26: Class 12 Chemistry Hub — Notes, Figures, Summaries, Quizzes & Downloads
This hub brings together all ten NCERT units/chapters — Solutions, Electrochemistry, Chemical Kinetics, d- & f-Block Elements, Coordination Compounds, Haloalkanes & Haloarenes, Alcohols–Phenols–Ethers, Aldehydes–Ketones–Carboxylic Acids, Amines, and Biomolecules — with chapters 1–10 presented in a consistent, exam-ready format. Every chapter block follows the same layout: Notes → Figures → Quick Summary → 10-MCQ Quiz → Downloads. Use the sticky contents at left to jump between chapters, and the search box to filter chapters live on this page.
Syllabus verified • Updated: 06 Sep 2025Unit Overview
This page is your master table of contents for NCERT Class XII Chemistry. Chapters are ordered as in the official syllabus, and each chapter block is self-contained for teaching and revision: topic-wise notes with definitions & logic, diagram/mechanism callouts, a quick summary for last-minute revision, a 10-MCQ quiz for NEET/Boards pattern practice, and downloads (formula sheets, reaction maps, tables). Progress chips flag weightage (High/Medium), numerical/derivation density, and PYQ focus to help you prioritise.
01 Solutions
Chapter Notes
- Solutions are homogeneous mixtures; the solvent defines the physical state.
- Types by state: gaseous (e.g., O2 in N2), liquid (e.g., ethanol in water), solid (e.g., H2 in Pd; alloys).
- Concentration units: mass% (w/w), volume% (v/v), w/V, ppm, mole fraction (x), molarity (M), molality (m).
- M is temperature-dependent (volume varies); m, x, mass% and ppm are temperature-independent.
- Solubility: “like dissolves like”; solids in liquids—T effect depends on ΔHsol; pressure has negligible effect.
- Gases in liquids: solubility ↑ with pressure (Henry’s law p = KHx), ↓ with temperature (exothermic dissolution).
- Vapour pressure: non-volatile solute lowers psolvent; for volatile–volatile mixtures, Raoult’s law applies.
- Ideal vs non-ideal: ideal obey Raoult’s law across range (ΔHmix=0, ΔVmix=0); non-ideal show ± deviations and may form azeotropes.
- Colligative properties depend on particle number: RLVP, ΔTb = Kbm, ΔTf = Kfm, Π = CRT.
- Van’t Hoff factor (i) adjusts for association/dissociation: use iK, iC in colligative relations.
- Applications: soft drinks (CO2 pressure), scuba diving (He–N2–O2 mix), RO desalination (pressure > Π).
Important Figures
Quick Summary
Focus on when to use M vs m, Henry’s and Raoult’s laws, recognizing deviations (positive/negative) and azeotropes, and inserting van’t Hoff factor i for associating/dissociating solutes in colligative-property numericals.
Practice Quiz (10 MCQs)
02 Electrochemistry
Chapter Notes
- Electrochemistry studies conversion between chemical and electrical energy: spontaneous reactions (galvanic cells) produce electricity; non-spontaneous reactions (electrolytic cells) are driven by electricity.
- Galvanic cell example (Daniell): Zn(s) + Cu2+(aq) → Zn2+(aq) + Cu(s); anode (oxidation) is negative, cathode (reduction) is positive; electrons flow anode → cathode.
- Electrode potential arises at metal–solution interface; standard electrode potentials are IUPAC standard reduction potentials.
- Standard Hydrogen Electrode (SHE): Pt(s)|H2(g, 1 bar)|H+(aq, 1 M); assigned 0.00 V by convention and used to measure E° of other half-cells.
- Cell potential (emf) under no current: Ecell = Eright − Eleft; for standard state E°cell = E°cathode − E°anode.
- Nernst: Ecell = E°cell − (RT/nF) ln Q; at 298 K, Ecell = E°cell − (0.059/n) log Q.
- Thermo links: ΔrG = −nFEcell; ΔrG° = −nFE°cell; E°cell = (2.303RT/nF) log K and ΔrG° = −RT ln K.
- Conductivity κ decreases with dilution; molar conductivity Λm = κ/c increases with dilution. Limiting molar conductivity Λ°m at infinite dilution.
- Kohlrausch’s law: Λ°m = ν+λ°+ + ν−λ°− (sum of ionic contributions), useful for weak electrolytes and dissociation constants.
- Electrolysis: Faraday’s laws; Q = It; products depend on E° values, electrode type, and overpotential.
- Batteries: primary (dry cell ~1.5 V, mercury ~1.35 V), secondary (lead–acid, Ni–Cd); Fuel cells (H2–O2) produce water with high efficiency.
- Corrosion (e.g., rusting of iron) is electrochemical; prevent via coatings or sacrificial anodes (Zn, Mg).
- Hydrogen economy: use renewable H2 (electrolysis) and fuel cells for clean energy.
Important Figures
Quick Summary
Know cell conventions (anode/cathode signs, electron flow), write Nernst quickly at 298 K, connect E° to ΔG° and K, and distinguish κ vs Λm. For numericals, identify n, pick correct Q, and keep units consistent with F ≈ 96,487 C mol−1.
Practice Quiz (10 MCQs)
03 d- and f-Block Elements
Chapter Notes
- d-block (groups 3–12) and f-block (4f/5f) metals have partially filled d or f orbitals; they underpin metallurgy, catalysis, batteries, and nuclear energy.
- IUPAC: transition metals have an incomplete d subshell in the atom or in common ions; Zn, Cd, Hg are not strictly transition (d10), though studied alongside.
- Electronic configuration: general (n−1)d1–10 ns1–2 with exceptions (Cr: 3d54s1, Cu: 3d104s1) due to extra stability of half/full d.
- Physical properties: high strength, hardness, m.p./b.p., metallic lustre, good thermal/electrical conductivity; high enthalpy of atomization.
- Sizes: across a series radii decrease; lanthanoid contraction makes many 4d/5d pairs (e.g., Zr–Hf) nearly identical in size and properties.
- Ionisation enthalpies increase across a series; ns electrons are lost before (n−1)d on ion formation; stability of d5, d10 causes irregularities.
- Oxidation states: multiple states (often differ by 1); mid-series elements show the widest range (Mn: +2 to +7). Higher states stabilize down a group (e.g., Mo(VI), W(VI)).
- Redox/E° trends: E°(M2+/M) becomes less negative across; Cu has +0.34 V (does not liberate H2 from acids) due to atomization/hydration energetics.
- Magnetism: many ions are paramagnetic; spin-only μ = √(n(n+2)) BM (n = unpaired electrons).
- Colour: d–d transitions in partially filled d subshells cause coloured ions/solids.
- Complex formation: favored by small, highly charged cations with accessible d orbitals; rich coordination chemistry.
- Catalysis: variable oxidation states and surface adsorption enable catalysis (V2O5, Fe/Haber, Ni/hydrogenation, PdCl2/Wacker).
- Interstitial compounds and alloys: small atoms (H, C, N) occupy interstices; similar radii promote alloying.
- Key compounds: K2Cr2O7 (strong oxidant in acid; chromate–dichromate pH interconversion), KMnO4 (prepared via alkaline manganate and electrolytic oxidation; potent oxidant in acid/neutral/alkaline media).
- f-block: lanthanoids (Ce–Lu) mainly +3 (also +2/+4 for f0, f7, f14 cases); actinoids (Th–Lr) show wider oxidation states (+3 to +7) and stronger 5f participation; both show contraction.
- Applications: steels, catalysts, pigments (TiO2), batteries (MnO2, Zn, Ni/Cd), coinage alloys (Ag, Au, Cu/Ni), photography (AgBr), nuclear energy (Th, Pa, U).
Important Figures
Quick Summary
Remember the IUPAC definition, Cr/Cu exceptions, the effect of lanthanoid contraction, oxidation-state patterns (Mn widest in 3d), spin-only magnetism, and the oxidative roles of dichromate and permanganate. For f-block, default +3 for lanthanoids with notable +2/+4 cases, and broader oxidation range for actinoids.
Practice Quiz (10 MCQs)
04 d- and f-Block Elements
Chapter Notes
- Location & definition: d-block (Groups 3–12) fills (n−1)d orbitals; f-block (4f/5f) sits separately below the table.
- IUPAC transition metal: metal with an incomplete d subshell in atom or in its common ions. Group 12 (Zn, Cd, Hg, Cn) are not strictly transition (d10), though studied together.
- Electronic configuration: general (n−1)d1–10 ns1–2; stability of half/full d gives exceptions (Cr: 3d54s1, Cu: 3d104s1; Pd: 4d105s0).
- Physical properties: high strength, hardness, m.p./b.p., metallic lustre; high enthalpy of atomisation (peaks around d5); density rises Ti→Cu.
- Sizes: radii decrease across a series; lanthanoid contraction makes many 4d/5d pairs (e.g., Zr–Hf) nearly identical in size/properties.
- Ionisation enthalpies: increase across a series; ns lost before (n−1)d on ionisation; irregularities due to d0, d5, d10 stabilities.
- Oxidation states: multiple and often differ by 1; widest near mid-series (Mn: +2 to +7). Higher states stabilised by O/F; π-acceptor ligands stabilise low/zero states (e.g., Ni(CO)4).
- Standard potentials: E°(M2+/M) trend becomes less negative across; Cu has +0.34 V (does not liberate H2 from acids). Mn3+, Co3+ strong oxidants; Ti2+, V2+, Cr2+ strong reductants.
- Magnetism: many ions are paramagnetic; spin-only μ = √(n(n+2)) BM (n = unpaired electrons); some show ferro/antiferromagnetism.
- Colour: arises mainly from d–d transitions in partially filled d subshells.
- Complex formation: small, highly charged cations with accessible d orbitals form numerous complexes.
- Catalysis: variable oxidation states and adsorption enable catalysis (V2O5, Fe/Haber, Ni/H2, PdCl2/Wacker).
- Interstitial compounds & alloys: H/C/N in interstices → very hard, high m.p., metallic conductivity; similar radii promote alloying (steels, brass, bronze).
- Key compounds: K2Cr2O7 (acidic medium oxidant; chromate⇌dichromate with pH), KMnO4 (from alkaline manganate via electrolysis; strong oxidant—products depend on pH).
- f-block overview: lanthanoids (Ce–Lu) mainly +3, some +2/+4 due to f0, f7, f14 stability; actinoids (Th–Lr) wider range (+3 to +7), stronger 5f participation; both show contraction (actinoid > lanthanoid).
- Applications: steels (Fe/Cr/Mn/Ni), pigments (TiO2), batteries (MnO2, Zn, Ni/Cd), coinage (Ag, Au, Cu/Ni), photography (AgBr), nuclear energy (Th, Pa, U).
Important Figures
Quick Summary
Anchor on the IUPAC definition, Cr/Cu/Pd exceptions, lanthanoid contraction (Zr≈Hf), oxidation-state breadth (Mn widest), roles of O/F in stabilising high states, and why Cu (E° = +0.34 V) won’t liberate H2. Know dichromate/permanganate prep and redox across media, and the lanthanoid (+3) vs actinoid (broader) contrast.
Practice Quiz (10 MCQs)
05 Coordination Compounds
Chapter Notes
- Coordination compounds: metal center bound to anions/neutral molecules via donor atoms; key to bioinorganic systems (chlorophyll, haemoglobin, B12), catalysis, analysis, metallurgy, electroplating, dyes, and medicine.
- Werner’s theory (1898): metals exhibit primary valence (oxidation state; ionisable) and secondary valence (coordination number; non-ionisable, fixed geometry). Species inside [ ] act as one undissociated entity.
- Key terms: coordination entity [ ], central ion (Lewis acid), ligands (uni/di/poly-dentate; chelating; ambidentate such as NO2−/ONO−, SCN−/NCS−), coordination number (donor atoms bound), coordination sphere, polyhedra (octahedral, square planar, tetrahedral), oxidation number, homoleptic vs heteroleptic.
- IUPAC naming: list ligands (alphabetical; anionic “-o/-ido”, neutral special names ammine/aqua/carbonyl/nitrosyl), prefixes (di/tri…; bis/tris for complex ligand names), metal with oxidation state in Roman numerals; “-ate” for anionic complexes.
- Isomerism: Stereoisomerism—geometrical (cis–trans; fac–mer) and optical (enantiomers; common with didentate ligands e.g., [Co(en)3]3+). Structural—linkage (NO2 vs ONO), coordination, ionisation, and solvate (hydrate) isomerism.
- VBT: hybridisation model (sp3, dsp2, d2sp3/sp3d2) explains geometry and (dia/para)magnetism via paired/unpaired d electrons; limited for colours and thermodynamics.
- CFT: electrostatic model; d-orbital splitting—octahedral Δo (eg higher, t2g lower), tetrahedral Δt = 4/9 Δo (inverted order). Spectrochemical series: I− < Br− < Cl− < F− < H2O < NH3 < en < NO2− < CN− < CO. Colour from d–d transitions; magnetic behaviour from unpaired count (Δ vs pairing energy P).
- Metal carbonyls: synergic bonding—σ donation (CO → M) + π back-donation (M d → CO π*), strengthening M–CO.
- Applications: EDTA complexometry (hardness), cyanidation/extraction and Mond process [Ni(CO)4], catalysis (Wilkinson’s catalyst, V2O5, Fe/Haber), electroplating via complexes ([Ag(CN)2]−), photography (AgBr + thiosulfate), chelation therapy (EDTA, D-penicillamine, desferrioxamine), antitumor agents (cis-platin).
Important Figures
Quick Summary
Map Werner’s primary vs secondary valences, practice IUPAC names, and classify isomerism (linkage/ionisation/coordination vs cis–trans/fac–mer and optical). For bonding, contrast VBT (hybrid + spin) with CFT (Δ, spectrochemical series, colour, magnetism). Remember synergic M–CO bonding and core applications (EDTA, cyanidation, plating, cis-platin).
Practice Quiz (10 MCQs)
06 Haloalkanes & Haloarenes
Chapter Notes
- Definitions: Haloalkanes (alkyl halides): X on sp3 C of an alkyl group. Haloarenes (aryl halides): X directly on sp2 C of an aromatic ring.
- Classification: 1°, 2°, 3° (by carbon type); mono/di/poly-halo; allylic/benzylic (sp3–X adjacent to C=C or aryl), vinylic/aryl (sp2–X). Dihaloalkanes: geminal vs vicinal.
- Nomenclature: IUPAC halosubstituted names (e.g., 2-chlorobutane); o/m/p (common) vs 1,2/1,3/1,4 (IUPAC) for dihalobenzenes.
- C–X bond: Polar (δ+ on C, δ− on X). Bond length ↑ and bond enthalpy ↓ from C–F → C–I.
- Preparation (haloalkanes): ROH → RX (HX, PCl3/5, SOCl2—preferred; gaseous by-products). Alkenes + HX (Markovnikov), +X2 (vic-dihalides), free-radical halogenation (mixtures). Halogen exchange: Finkelstein (NaI/acetone → RI), Swarts (AgF/CoF2 → RF).
- Preparation (haloarenes): Electrophilic substitution (Cl2/Br2 + Lewis acid); Sandmeyer (ArN2+ → ArCl/ArBr; KI for ArI).
- Physical properties: b.p. RI > RBr > RCl > RF (for same R); branching lowers b.p.; p-dihalobenzenes have higher m.p. (better packing). Slightly water-soluble; denser with heavier X/more X.
- Reactivity (haloalkanes): Nucleophilic substitution (SN2: backside attack, inversion; rate ~ [RX][Nu−], Me > 1° > 2° > 3°. SN1: carbocation, racemisation; rate ~ [RX], 3° > 2° > 1° > Me). Leaving group: I− > Br− > Cl− ≫ F−. Ambident nucleophiles: KCN → R–C≡N; AgCN → R–N≡C.
- Elimination (β, E2): alc. KOH gives alkenes; Zaitsev’s rule → more substituted alkene major. Competition: S vs E depends on substrate/base/solvent/T.
- Metals: Grignard RMgX (dry ether); Wurtz (R–X + 2Na → R–R); Wurtz–Fittig/Fittig for aryl systems.
- Haloarenes: Nucleophilic substitution is difficult (resonance → partial double bond; sp2–X shorter/stronger; unstable phenyl cation; π–π repulsion). –NO2 at o/p activates towards SNAr; meta has little effect. Electrophilic substitution: X is deactivating (−I) but o/p-directing (resonance).
- Polyhalogen compounds & environment: CHCl3 → phosgene in air/light (store dark); CCl4, CFCs deplete ozone; DDT bioaccumulates; many are toxic (CNS, liver/kidney).
Important Figures
Quick Summary
Know classes (allylic/benzylic/vinylic/aryl), C–X trends (C–F strongest), key preparations (SOCl2, Finkelstein/Swarts, Sandmeyer), and outcomes: SN2 → inversion; SN1 → racemisation; alc. KOH → Zaitsev alkene. Haloarenes resist SN but o/p-NO2 activates. Review environmental hazards of polyhalogen compounds.
Practice Quiz (10 MCQs)
07 Alcohols, Phenols & Ethers
Chapter Notes
- Definitions: Alcohols: R–OH on sp3 C (aliphatic); Phenols: Ar–OH on sp2 aromatic C; Ethers: R–O–R′/Ar–O–R′.
- Classification: mono/di/tri/polyhydric; monohydric by site—1°, 2°, 3°, allylic (next to C=C), benzylic (next to aryl), vinylic (on C=C, sp2). Ethers: simple (sym) vs mixed.
- Nomenclature: Alcohols: “alkan-ol” (ethan-1-ol); polyols keep ‘e’ (ethane-1,2-diol). Phenols: o/m/p (common) or 1,2/1,3/1,4 (IUPAC). Ethers: alkoxy-parent (methoxybenzene) or common “alkyl alkyl ether”.
- Structure: Alcohol/ether O is sp3; phenolic C–O shorter via resonance (partial double bond). Ether C–O–C angle slightly widened (lone pair–bond pair repulsions + bulky groups).
- Preparation (alcohols): alkenes → R–OH by acid hydration (Markovnikov) or hydroboration–oxidation (anti-Markovnikov); carbonyl reductions (NaBH4/LiAlH4); acids/esters → 1° ROH (LiAlH4); Grignard + carbonyls.
- Preparation (phenols): from ArX (NaOH, high T/P), from benzenesulphonate (molten NaOH → acidify), from diazonium (hydrolysis), industrial cumene process.
- Preparation (ethers): Williamson (R–X + R′O−, best with 1° R–X; SN2); dehydration of 1° alcohols at controlled T (otherwise alkenes form).
- Physical trends: Alcohols/phenols H-bond → higher b.p. than isomass ethers/haloalkanes; branching lowers b.p. Solubility in water decreases with longer/larger hydrophobes; small ethers dissolve via H-bond acceptance.
- Alcohol reactions: acidity (RO− + H2), esterification, R–OH → R–X (HX/PX3/SOCl2), dehydration (3° > 2° > 1°), oxidation (1° → RCHO/RCOOH; 2° → RCOR′; 3° resist).
- Phenol reactions: stronger acid than alcohols/water (phenoxide resonance); EAS o/p-directing (nitration, halogenation), Kolbe (→ salicylic acid), Reimer–Tiemann (→ salicylaldehyde), Zn dust → benzene, oxidation → quinone.
- Ether reactions: strong HX cleavage (HI > HBr ≫ HCl); Ar–O–R cleaves at alkyl–O to give Ar–OH + R–X; anisole activates ring o/p (EAS, FC alkyl/acylation, nitration).
- Key alcohols: Methanol (CO + H2 hydrogenation); Ethanol (fermentation; denatured with additives).
Important Figures
Quick Summary
Choose hydration (Markovnikov) or hydroboration–oxidation (anti-Markovnikov). Use Williamson (SN2) with 1° halides for ethers. Remember: phenol acidity > water > ethanol; phenoxide is resonance-stabilised. Lucas test: 3° reacts fastest. Phenol gives Kolbe (–COOH ortho) and Reimer–Tiemann (–CHO ortho); anisole cleaves with HI to phenol + R–I.
Practice Quiz (10 MCQs)
08 Aldehydes, Ketones & Carboxylic Acids
Chapter Notes
- Carbonyl family: Aldehydes (R–CHO), ketones (R–CO–R′), and carboxylic acids (R–COOH) revolve around the polar >C=O group (sp2, trigonal planar ~120°).
- Polarity & reactivity: Cδ+ is electrophilic (site for nucleophilic addition). Aldehydes are generally more reactive than ketones (less steric/electronic crowding).
- Nomenclature (IUPAC): aldehydes → -al (ring: -carbaldehyde), ketones → -one, carboxylic acids → -oic acid.
- Preparations: controlled oxidation/dehydrogenation of alcohols; ozonolysis of alkenes; alkyne hydration (ethyne → ethanal; others → ketones). Special: Rosenmund (acyl chloride → aldehyde), Stephen (RCN → RCHO), DIBAL-H (esters/RCN → aldehydes), Friedel–Crafts acylation (aryl ketones), Grignard + CO2 (acids).
- Physical trends: b.p.: aldehydes/ketones > hydrocarbons (dipoles) but < alcohols (no intermolecular H-bonding). Carboxylic acids dimerise via H-bonds → very high b.p. Lower members are water-miscible.
- Nucleophilic additions: HCN (cyanohydrins), NaHSO3 adducts, alcohols (hemiacetal/acetal; ketal), NH2Z (imines/oximes/hydrazones).
- Redox: Aldehydes → acids (Tollens mirror/Fehling); carbonyl → alcohols (NaBH4, LiAlH4). >C=O → >CH2: Clemmensen (Zn(Hg)/HCl, acidic) or Wolff–Kishner (N2H4/KOH, heat, basic).
- α-Chemistry: Aldol (needs α-H; gives β-hydroxy carbonyl then dehydration); haloform test for methyl ketones; Cannizzaro (no α-H) disproportionation.
- Acid reactions: R–COOH stronger than ROH/ArOH (resonance-stabilised carboxylate); effervescence with NaHCO3; HVZ α-halogenation (X2/P).
- Uses: formalin (preservative), acetone/MEK (solvents), benzoates/esters (flavours, preservatives), acetic acid (vinegar), higher acids (soaps).
Important Figures
Quick Summary
Prioritise nucleophilic addition logic (aldehyde > ketone), match named reactions (Rosenmund, Stephen, DIBAL-H, Gattermann–Koch), and recognise diagnostic tests (Tollens/Fehling, haloform). For acids, remember resonance-stabilised carboxylate, NaHCO3 effervescence, and HVZ at the α-position.
Practice Quiz (10 MCQs)
09 Amines & Diazonium Salts
Chapter Notes
- Structure & classification: Amines are NH3 derivatives; N is sp3, trigonal pyramidal. Types—1° (RNH2/ArNH2), 2° (R2NH), 3° (R3N); simple vs mixed.
- Nomenclature: Common: alkylamine/arylamine; IUPAC: alkanamine; N-substituents labeled with “N-”. Aniline = benzenamine.
- Preparations: Nitro reduction (H2/Ni, Fe/HCl); ammonolysis of RX (mixtures); RCN/amide reductions (LiAlH4, H2); Gabriel (1° only, not aryl); Hofmann bromamide (RCONH2 → RNH2 with −1 C).
- Physical trends: Lower aliphatic amines—gases (fishy); H-bonding: 1° > 2° > 3° → b.p. order. Water solubility drops with chain length; aniline darkens on storage.
- Basicity: Lone pair on N → Lewis base; salts in acid. Gas phase: 3° > 2° > 1° > NH3. Aqueous (solvation/sterics): (CH3)2NH > CH3NH2 > (CH3)3N > NH3. Aromatic amines are weaker (lone pair delocalisation); +R/−I substituent effects apply.
- Reactions (amines): Alkylation → higher amines/quaternary salts; acylation (1°,2°) → amides; carbylamine (1° + CHCl3/KOH → isocyanide, foul smell); nitrous acid: 1° aliphatic → alcohol + N2↑, 1° aromatic → stable diazonium at 273–278 K; Hinsberg separation (1° soluble sulphonamide; 2° insoluble; 3° no reaction).
- Arylamines (aniline): Strongly activating o,p-directing; Br2(aq) → 2,4,6-tribromoaniline; protection via acetylation for controlled EAS. No FC due to salt formation with AlCl3.
- Diazonium salts: Ar–N2+X− from ArNH2 + NaNO2/HCl at 273–278 K (diazotisation). Resonance-stabilised, used in situ (cold).
- Reactions (diazonium): Sandmeyer/Gattermann (Cu(I)/Cu → ArCl/ArBr/ArCN); KI → ArI; HBF4/heat → ArF; H3PO2 → Ar–H; hydrolysis → phenol; to –NO2 (via Cu/NO2−); azo coupling with phenols/arylamines → Ar–N=N–Ar′ dyes.
Important Figures
Quick Summary
Remember selectivity (Gabriel 1°; Hinsberg separation), carbylamine test (1° only), aqueous basicity orders, protected EAS on aniline, and diazonium utility (Sandmeyer/Gattermann, KI, HBF4, H3PO2, hydrolysis) plus azo coupling conditions.
Practice Quiz (10 MCQs)
10 Biomolecules
Chapter Notes
- Carbohydrates: Polyhydroxy aldehydes/ketones or yield them on hydrolysis. Classes—mono/oligo (di- most common)/poly. Reducing vs non-reducing (all monosaccharides are reducing).
- Key monosaccharides: D-Glucose (aldohexose) forms cyclic hemiacetal (α/β-D-glucopyranose); D-Fructose (ketohexose) forms furanose.
- Disaccharides: Sucrose (non-reducing; hydrolysis → D-glucose + D-fructose; invert sugar), maltose (α-D-Glc + α-D-Glc; reducing), lactose (β-D-Gal + β-D-Glc; reducing).
- Polysaccharides: Starch = amylose (α-1→4) + amylopectin (α-1→4, α-1→6 branches); cellulose = β-1→4 D-glucose; glycogen = highly branched (like amylopectin, more dense).
- Proteins: Polymers of α-amino acids; peptide (-CO-NH-) link; levels—primary (sequence), secondary (α-helix/β-sheet, H-bonding), tertiary (3D fold), quaternary (subunits). Zwitterions; essential vs non-essential AAs.
- Denaturation: Loss of secondary/tertiary structure and activity; primary sequence intact (e.g., egg white coagulation).
- Enzymes: Mostly globular proteins; highly specific; lower activation energy.
- Vitamins: Fat-soluble A, D, E, K (stored); water-soluble B-group, C (regular supply; except B12 storage). Deficiency: A—night blindness; C—scurvy; D—rickets.
- Nucleic acids: DNA/RNA = polynucleotides (sugar + base + phosphate). DNA: β-D-2-deoxyribose; bases A,G,C,T; double helix; A–T, G–C. RNA: β-D-ribose; A,G,C,U; usually single-stranded; mRNA, rRNA, tRNA.
- Hormones: Endocrine messengers—steroids (e.g., cortisol, sex hormones), peptides (insulin), amino-acid derivatives (thyroxine, epinephrine); regulate metabolism, growth, stress, homeostasis.
Important Figures
Quick Summary
Carbs: recognise reducing/non-reducing and key linkages (α-1→4/1→6 vs β-1→4). Proteins: peptide bond, four structural levels, denaturation. Enzymes: specific globular catalysts. Vitamins: ADEK (fat-sol), B/C (water-sol). Nucleic acids: nucleotide vs nucleoside, DNA pairing, RNA types. Hormones: peptide/steroid/AA-derived regulators.
