• - Your preferred source of Exams and Syllabus.

    GATE 2012 CHEMISTRY SYLLABUS (CY)


    Physical Chemistry    

    Structure:   Quantum theory: principles and techniques; applications to a particle in a box, harmonic  oscillator, rigid rotor and hydrogen atom; valence bond and molecular orbital theories,  Hückel approximation; approximate techniques: variation and perturbation; symmetry,  point groups; rotational, vibrational, electronic, NMR, and ESR spectroscopy  

    Equilibrium:  Kinetic theory of gases; First law of thermodynamics, heat, energy, and work; second  law of thermodynamics and entropy; third law and absolute entropy; free energy; partial  molar quantities; ideal and non-ideal solutions; phase transformation: phase rule and  phase diagrams - one, two, and three component systems; activity, activity coefficient,  fugacity, and fugacity coefficient; chemical equilibrium, response of chemical equilibrium  to temperature and pressure; colligative properties; Debye-Hückel theory;  thermodynamics of electrochemical cells; standard electrode potentials: applications -  corrosion and energy conversion; molecular partition function (translational, rotational,  vibrational, andelectronic). 

     Kinetics:  Rates of chemical reactions, temperature dependence of chemical reactions;  elementary, consecutive, and parallel reactions; steady state approximation; theories of  reaction rates -  collision andtransition state theory, relaxation kinetics, kinetics of  photochemical reactions and free radical polymerization, homogeneous catalysis,  adsorption isotherms and heterogeneous catalysis.  

    Inorganic Chemistry   

    Main group elements:  General characteristics, allotropes, structure and reactions of simple and industrially  important compounds: boranes, carboranes, silicones, silicates, boron nitride, borazines  and phosphazenes. Hydrides, oxides and oxoacids of pnictogens (N, P), chalcogens (S,  Se & Te) and halogens, xenon compounds, pseudo halogens and interhalogen  compounds. Shapes of molecules and hard-  soft acid base concept. Structure and  Bonding (VBT) of B, Al, Si, N, P, S, Cl compounds. Allotropes of carbon: graphite,  diamond, C 60. Synthesis and reactivity of inorganic polymers of Si and P.  

    Transition Elements:  General characteristics of d and f block elements; coordination chemistry: structure and  isomerism, stability, theories of metal- ligand bonding (CFT and LFT), mechanisms of  substitution and electron transfer reactions of coordination complexes. Electronic  spectra and magnetic properties of transition metal complexes, lanthanides and  actinides. Metal carbonyls, metal- metal bonds and metal atom clusters, metallocenes;  transition metal complexes with bonds to hydrogen, alkyls, alkenes and arenes; metal  carbenes; use of organometallic compounds as catalysts in organic synthesis.  Bioinorganic chemistry of Na, K. Mg, Ca, Fe, Co, Zn, Cu and Mo.  

    Solids:  Crystal systems and lattices, miller planes, crystal packing, crystal defects; Bragg's Law,  ionic crystals, band theory, metals and semiconductors, Different structures of AX, AX 2,  ABX 3 compounds, spinels. 

     Instrumental methods of analysis:  Atomic absorption and emission spectroscopy including ICP-AES, UV-  visible  spectrophotometry, NMR, mass, Mossbauer spectroscopy (Fe and Sn), ESR  spectroscopy, chromatography including GC and HPLC and electro-analytical methods  (Coulometry, cyclic voltammetry, polarography   amperometry, and ion selective  electrodes).  

    Organic Chemistry   
    Stereochemistry:  Chirality of organic molecules with or without chiral centres. Specification of  configuration in compounds having one or more stereogenic centres. Enantiotopic and  diastereotopic atoms, groups and faces. Stereoselective and stereospecific synthesis.  Conformational analysis of acyclic and cyclic compounds. Geometrical isomerism.  Configurational and conformational effects on reactivity and selectivity/specificity.  
    Reaction mechanism:  Methods of determining reaction mechanisms. Nucleophilic and electrophilic  substitutions and additions to multiple bonds. Elimination reactions. Reactive  intermediates-  carbocations, carbanions, carbenes, nitrenes, arynes, free radicals.  Molecular rearrangements involving electron deficient atoms.  

    Organic synthesis:  Synthesis, reactions, mechanisms and selectivity involving the following-  alkenes,  alkynes, arenes, alcohols, phenols, aldehydes, ketones, carboxylic acids and their  derivatives, halides, nitro compounds and amines. Use of compounds of Mg, Li, Cu, B  and Si in organic synthesis. Concepts in multistep synthesis- retrosynthetic analysis,  disconnections, synthons, synthetic equivalents, reactivity umpolung, selectivity,  protection and deprotection of functional groups. 

    Pericyclic reactions:  Electrocyclic, cycloaddition and sigmatropic reactions. Orbital correlation, FMO and  PMO treatments.   Photochemistry:  Basic principles. Photochemistry of alkenes, carbonyl compounds, and arenes.  Photooxidation and photoreduction. Di-π- methane rearrangement, Barton reaction.  
    Heterocyclic compounds:  Structure, preparation, properties and reactions of furan, pyrrole, thiophene, pyridine,  indole and their derivatives.  

    Biomolecules:  Structure, properties and reactions of mono-  and di-saccharides, physicochemical  properties of amino acids, chemical synthesis of peptides, structural features of  proteins, nucleic acids, steroids, terpenoids, carotenoids, and alkaloids.  

    Spectroscopy:  Principles and applications of UV-visible, IR, NMR and Mass spectrometry in the  determination of structures of organic molecules.