Chemistry revision reimagined for JEE & NEET

Understand Chemistry.
Revise Smarter.
Score Better.

Stop memorising. Start understanding. Practice chemistry problems the right way β€” chapter by chapter, mistake by mistake.

400+Chemistry Problems
28JEE Chapters
6Mistake Categories
βš—οΈ Β Equilibrium β€” Concept Understood!
🎯  Mistake Diagnosed: Formula Error

The LearnCritically Method

01
πŸ“–
Learn Through Guided Problems

Every concept is introduced through a problem that forces you to think first β€” not passive theory reading.

02
πŸ—‚οΈ
Revise by Chapter

Chapter-wise revision paths that build understanding layer by layer, not just formula recall.

03
πŸ”
Understand Where Marks Are Lost

Diagnose the exact type of mistake β€” wrong assumption, formula error, or concept gap.

04
⚑
Improve Through Active Practice

JEE-style problems and weekly challenges to make chemistry stick long-term.

Diagnose My Mistakes

In chemistry, how you got it wrong matters more than that you got it wrong. Click any category.

Start Revising by Chapter

Select your grade to see the chapter-wise revision path.

Solve This Now

A real JEE-style question. Select an option, then reveal the answer and mistake diagnosis.

βš–οΈ Chemical EquilibriumGrade 11Single Correct Β· JEE Mains

For the reaction: Nβ‚‚(g) + 3Hβ‚‚(g) β‡Œ 2NH₃(g)

At equilibrium: [Nβ‚‚] = 0.5 M, [Hβ‚‚] = 0.8 M, [NH₃] = 0.4 M.

If the volume is suddenly halved, in which direction will equilibrium shift?

Hint: When volume decreases, pressure increases. Count gas moles on each side β€” equilibrium shifts to reduce pressure.
βœ… Answer & Mistake Diagnosis
Correct Answer: (A) Towards products (forward)

Halving volume doubles pressure. Le Chatelier's shifts to reduce pressure β†’ fewer gas moles.

Left: 1 + 3 = 4 moles. Right: 2 moles. Forward shift reduces moles β†’ equilibrium moves to products.

πŸ” Common Mistake: If you chose (C) β€” Kc does not change (only temperature does), but the position of equilibrium does. Kc β‰  equilibrium position. This is a Concept Gap.

Challenge of the Week

A fresh, tougher chemistry problem every Sunday. Attempt it before the countdown ends.

Week 17 Β· May 11 – May 18, 2026

The Electrochemistry Trap

A galvanic cell is set up with Zn | Zn²⁺ (0.1 M) β€– Cu²⁺ (0.01 M) | Cu. Given EΒ°cell = +1.10 V, calculate the actual cell potential using the Nernst equation. Most students get the sign wrong β€” do you know why?

⚑ ElectrochemistryπŸ”’ Nernst Equation⚠️ Hard

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Previous Challenges
16The Bridge & Torch Puzzle β€” Logic
15Monty Hall Variation β€” Probability
14Passage: On Scientific Consensus β€” Comprehension