Chemistry Summary

Chemistry is everywhere in the world around you! It’s in the food you eat, clothes you wear, water you drink, medicines, air, cleaners… you name it. Chemistry sometimes is called the “central science” because it connects to other sciences, such as biology, physics, geology and environmental science. There is something for everyone within the AQA chemistry course. It is split into three major strands – physical, inorganic and organic. Physical chemistry gives an insight into bonding, energy and reactions, linking well to mathematics. Inorganic chemistry looks at trends and properties of elements. Organic chemistry brings in the idea of reaction mechanisms, analysis techniques and functional groups – all based on carbon! There are required practicals built into each of these strands. Each of these has a specific skill focus, such as data analysis, risk assessments or referencing. You will complete twelve required practicals over the two-year course, handing in laboratory write-ups for your teacher to mark. These will need to be up to a sufficient standard so that you achieve a practical endorsement for this course.

Entry Requirements

Minimum of a 7 and 6 in GCSE Science (or included in triple science grades), plus a 6 in GCSE Mathematics and a 6 in GCSE English

Course Duration

2 years full-time

Specification

AQA

How you will study

Chemistry involves the study of what everything in life is made of. This includes atoms, bonding and reactions. To understand this, you will need to have a real understanding of the basic principles of chemistry which are then applied throughout the course. To help you achieve this, you will use textbooks and the internet to read around the subject, whilst backing all of this up with detailed practical work.

Component breakdown

Paper 1 Physical and Inorganic – 2hr exam (35%).

Paper 2 Physical and Organic – 2hr exam (35%).

Paper 3 – 2hr exam (30%)

Physical: Atomic Structure, Amount of Substance, Bonding, Energetics, Kinetics, Redox, Thermodynamics, Rate equations, Equilibrium constant, Electrochemistry and Acids and Bases

Inorganic: Group 7 elements, Reaction of period 3 elements, Transition metals and Ion reaction analysis

Organic: Naming compounds, Alkanes, Haloalkanes, Alkenes, Alcohols, Isomerism, Carboxylic acids, Biochemistry and Analysis.

You will complete twelve required practicals over the two-year course, handing in laboratory write-ups for your teacher to mark. These will need to be up to a sufficient standard so that you achieve a practical endorsement for this course.

Thousands of jobs will always need science and, in particular, chemistry. These include, but are not limited to:

Analytical Chemist

Chemical Engineer

Environmental Chemist

Forensic Scientist

Healthcare Scientist

Industrial Chemist

Nuclear Chemist

Organic Chemist

Research Scientist

Teacher

Toxicologist

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