MTG 38 Years Chemistry NEET Chapterwise Solved Papers – QuickReflex
The MTG 38 Years Chemistry guide is a massive repository of every single question asked in AIPMT/NEET since 1988. Chemistry in NEET is notoriously balanced between NCERT-based facts and Physical Chemistry numericals. This MTG archive deconstructs decades of papers into chapter-wise segments, allowing students to identify recurring “Hot Topics” like P-Block anomalies, Named Reactions in Organic Chemistry, and Thermodynamics laws. It is the only resource that ensures your “Reaction Speed” is optimized for the actual exam day.
• Trend Analysis: A detailed graph showing the weightage of Physical, Organic, and Inorganic sections over 38 years.
• Step-by-Step Solutions: Detailed explanations for complex stoichiometry and molarity problems.
• Reaction Mechanisms: Visual electron-pushing diagrams for high-weightage Organic questions.
• NCERT Page References: Direct links to NCERT textbook paragraphs for factual Inorganic questions.
• Pattern Evolution: Insights into how questions have shifted from direct theory to Assertion-Reasoning types.
Inorganic Chemistry is where students save time. MTG’s 38-year collection highlights the frequent focus on Periodic Table Trends and Coordination Compounds. By practicing these PYQs, you learn to spot the “Exceptions” that NTA loves to test. The solutions provide the logical reasoning behind Bond Angles, Hybridization, and Magnetic Moments, ensuring you don’t just memorize but understand the trend.
[Image of the periodic table illustrating trends in atomic radius, ionization energy, and electronegativity]The Organic section features a timeline of Named Reactions and their mechanisms. MTG deconstructs multi-step conversions into logical roadmaps. In Physical Chemistry, the focus remains on the quantitative laws of Solutions, Electrochemistry, and Kinetics. This bulk resource is designed to turn your weak areas into scoring hubs through sheer repetitive exposure to high-yield patterns.
[Image of an electrochemical cell diagram illustrating anode, cathode, and electron flow]