Maths for A-Level Chemistry – The Bit Students Underestimate
One of the biggest surprises for many A-Level Chemistry students isn’t the chemistry at all – it’s the maths.
Not GCSE maths.
Not “just rearrange the equation” maths.
But applied, sometimes sneaky, exam-board-approved chemistry maths.
And it turns up everywhere.
Where the Maths Appears (Whether You Like It or Not)
1. Amount of Substance (The Mole – still haunting students)
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Converting mass ↔ moles
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Using molar ratios from balanced equations
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Limiting reagents (the exam board’s favourite trap)
This is rarely one clean calculation. It’s often a chain of steps, where one small slip ruins everything.
2. Concentrations & Dilutions
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Rearranging
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Unit conversions (cm³ ↔ dm³ – endlessly forgotten)
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Serial dilutions and titration maths
Students often know the formula but panic when the numbers don’t look tidy.
3. Graph Skills (Physics-level thinking, Chemistry context)
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Rate graphs
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Energy profile diagrams
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Interpreting gradients and areas
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Drawing best-fit lines properly (not dot-to-dot!)
A lot of lost marks come from reading graphs badly, not misunderstanding chemistry.
4. Logarithms (pH – the sudden jump)
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Understanding what a logarithmic scale actually means
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Moving between pH and
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Recognising that a change of 1 pH unit is a ×10 change
This is often the first time students realise maths rules still apply in chemistry.
5. Energetics & Data Handling
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Mean bond enthalpy calculations
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Hess cycles (spotting what cancels)
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Significant figures and correct rounding
Chemistry exams are very unforgiving when it comes to units, signs, and precision.
Why This Trips Students Up
The problem isn’t that students “can’t do maths”.
It’s that:
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The maths is hidden inside chemistry
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Questions are multi-step
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Marks are lost for method, not just the final answer
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Panic sets in when numbers don’t look familiar
Confidence drops fast – even when understanding is solid.
The Fix: Treat Maths as a Chemistry Skill
The strongest students:
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Write out units at every step
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Sketch rough graphs before committing to answers
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Check orders of magnitude (“does this number make sense?”)
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Practise exam-style maths, not textbook exercises
Maths in Chemistry isn’t about speed – it’s about structure and clarity.
Get that right, and marks start to stack up very quickly.
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