NEET Physical Chemistry Chapters 2026: Class 11 & 12 Complete List, Weightage & High-Yield Preparation Strategy
Updated March 2026 · 12 min read · Based on NTA Rationalized Syllabus 2025–26 & NEET PYQs 2019–2025
What You'll Find in This Post
- Complete chapter list for Class 11 & 12 Physical Chemistry
- Accurate weightage based on NEET 2019–2025 analysis
- High-yield topics within each chapter
- Most important formulas for quick revision
- Proven step-by-step preparation strategy
- Common mistakes that cost students marks
Why Physical Chemistry Decides Your NEET Chemistry Score
Physical Chemistry is the mathematical backbone of NEET Chemistry. It contributes roughly 35–40% of all Chemistry marks — translating to approximately 16–20 questions in the final paper. Unlike Organic Chemistry (which is mechanism-driven) or Inorganic Chemistry (which is memory-driven), Physical Chemistry demands a combination of conceptual clarity, formula application, and consistent numerical practice.
This is exactly what makes it the most predictable and highest-scoring section of NEET Chemistry. Students who master Physical Chemistry can realistically gain a 20–30 mark advantage over peers who neglect it.
This guide is built on analysis of NEET papers from 2019 to 2025, aligned with the NTA rationalized syllabus for 2025–26. Every chapter listed here is confirmed in the current syllabus — no outdated topics included.
Overall Weightage Snapshot
| Category | Approx. Weightage | Expected Questions | Marks |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total Physical Chemistry | ~38–42% | 17–19 Qs | 68–76 |
| Class 11 Foundation Chapters | ~20% | 9–10 Qs | 36–40 |
| Class 12 Application Chapters | ~18–20% | 8–9 Qs | 32–36 |
| Highest single chapter (Equilibrium) | ~6–7% | 2–4 Qs | 8–16 |
Class 11 Physical Chemistry — Foundation Chapters
Class 11 chapters form the base for everything in Class 12. Students who skip or rush through Class 11 Physical Chemistry almost always struggle with Electrochemistry, Solutions, and Chemical Kinetics later. Give these chapters the time they deserve.
Called the "language of Physical Chemistry" — you cannot solve Solutions or Electrochemistry without a solid grip on mole concept.
- Mole concept and Avogadro's number
- Stoichiometry and molar ratios
- Limiting reagent problems
- Empirical and molecular formula
- Percentage composition and yield calculations
- Concentration terms: Molarity, Molality, Normality, Mole fraction
Questions are split between theory (quantum numbers, electronic configuration) and numericals (Bohr model, de Broglie).
- Bohr's model — energy levels and radius of hydrogen atom
- Photoelectric effect and Einstein's equation
- Quantum numbers (n, l, m, s) and their allowed values
- Electronic configuration including exceptions (Cr, Cu)
- de Broglie wavelength: λ = h/mv
- Heisenberg's uncertainty principle
One of the highest-weightage chapters in Class 11. Often 2–3 questions appear directly from this chapter.
- VSEPR theory — predicting molecular shapes
- Hybridization (sp, sp², sp³, sp³d, sp³d²)
- Molecular Orbital Theory — bonding vs antibonding
- Bond order and its relation to stability
- Dipole moment and polarity
- Hydrogen bonding — inter vs intramolecular
Mostly formula-based with a few conceptual questions on spontaneity and entropy.
- System, surroundings, state functions
- First Law: ΔU = q + w
- Enthalpy (ΔH) and Hess's Law
- Entropy (ΔS) and the Second Law
- Gibbs Free Energy: ΔG = ΔH − TΔS
- Spontaneity conditions (ΔG < 0)
The single most important Physical Chemistry chapter in NEET. Expect 2–4 questions every year without exception.
- Law of mass action and equilibrium constant (Kc, Kp)
- Relation between Kc and Kp: Kp = Kc(RT)^Δn
- Le Chatelier's principle — effect of concentration, pressure, temperature
- pH, pOH, and pH of weak acids/bases
- Buffer solutions — Henderson-Hasselbalch equation
- Solubility product (Ksp) and common ion effect
- Hydrolysis of salts
A short chapter but foundational for Electrochemistry. Don't skip it.
- Oxidation number rules and calculation
- Identifying oxidizing and reducing agents
- Balancing redox equations — acidic and basic medium
- Disproportionation reactions
Class 12 Physical Chemistry — Application Chapters
Class 12 chapters are formula-heavy and directly numerical. If your Class 11 foundation is strong, these chapters are actually the easiest marks to pick up in NEET Chemistry. Each chapter here contributes 4–5% and is highly predictable in terms of question type.
- Raoult's Law — ideal and non-ideal solutions
- Colligative properties: relative lowering of vapour pressure, elevation of boiling point, depression of freezing point, osmotic pressure
- Van't Hoff factor (i) for electrolytes
- Abnormal molar mass — association and dissociation
Very high scoring — most questions are numerical and follow a fixed pattern once you know the formulas.
- Electrochemical cells: Galvanic vs electrolytic
- Standard electrode potential and EMF calculation
- Nernst equation: E = E° − (RT/nF)ln Q
- Conductance, conductivity, molar conductivity
- Kohlrausch's Law of independent migration of ions
- Faraday's Laws of electrolysis
- Batteries (primary, secondary) and corrosion
- Rate of reaction and rate law expression
- Order of reaction — zero, first, second order
- Half-life: t½ = 0.693/k (first order)
- Integrated rate laws and their graphs
- Arrhenius equation: k = Ae^(−Ea/RT)
- Activation energy from ln(k) vs 1/T graph
- Collision theory and transition state theory
Mostly theory-based. Direct NCERT lines are asked — this chapter rewards thorough NCERT reading more than practice.
- Adsorption vs absorption, physisorption vs chemisorption
- Freundlich adsorption isotherm
- Catalysis — homogeneous, heterogeneous, enzyme catalysis
- Colloids — preparation, properties, Tyndall effect
- Emulsions — types and examples
- Coagulation and Hardy-Schulze rule
Must-Know Formulas for NEET 2026
Keep these on your revision sheet. These formulas account for the majority of Physical Chemistry numericals in NEET:
Step-by-Step Preparation Strategy for NEET 2026
95% of NEET Physical Chemistry questions are rooted in NCERT examples and exercises. Read every solved example, work through every in-text question. Do not move to reference books until you have exhausted NCERT completely for each chapter.
As you study each chapter, write down every formula on a single dedicated sheet. Include units alongside each formula. Review this sheet every morning for 10 minutes. By exam day, formula recall should be automatic — not effortful.
Physical Chemistry is only learned by doing, not reading. Solve at least 20–30 numericals every day, rotating between Equilibrium, Thermodynamics, Electrochemistry, and Kinetics. Track your error types — recurring mistakes reveal gaps in conceptual understanding.
A significant number of students lose correct answers due to unit errors. Memorize: Joule ↔ Calorie (1 cal = 4.18 J), L·atm ↔ Joule (1 L·atm = 101.3 J), and the interconversion between Molarity, Molality, and Mole Fraction. Practice mixed-unit problems deliberately.
NEET increasingly tests graph interpretation — ln(k) vs 1/T for Arrhenius, concentration vs time for kinetics, pressure vs volume for gases. For each graph type, know what the slope represents, what a steeper slope means, and what happens to the graph when temperature or concentration changes.
Start by solving PYQs chapter-by-chapter (not full papers) to identify which question types repeat. Once you've covered all chapters, shift to timed full-length mock tests. Analyse every wrong answer — don't just note it, understand why your reasoning was wrong.
NCERT + Daily Numericals + Formula Revision = 160+ in Chemistry
Students who follow this consistently for 3 months score in the top 10% of Chemistry in NEETCommon Mistakes to Avoid
Skipping Class 11 chapters: Many students focus only on Class 12 Physical Chemistry. This backfires — Electrochemistry and Kinetics become nearly unsolvable without a strong foundation in Mole Concept and Equilibrium.
Memorizing formulas without understanding derivation: NEET often presents formulas in modified forms or asks about conditions where they apply. If you only memorize, you'll fail these questions. Understand where each formula comes from.
Ignoring units in answers: NEET MCQs are designed so that unit errors lead you to a specific wrong option. Always carry units through your calculations.
Not using ICE tables for equilibrium: Students who solve equilibrium problems "in their head" make avoidable errors. Always write out the ICE table, even in exams.
For chapter-wise notes, formula sheets, and daily MCQ practice tailored for NEET 2026, explore the NEET Chemistry section on JKEdusphere. If you found this useful, share it with your study group — every serious NEET aspirant needs a clear roadmap like this.