
Every year, thousands of Nigerian students enter the NECO Chemistry exam hall underprepared not because they did not read, but because the materials they used did not prepare them for how NECO actually sets its questions. I know this feeling personally. I remember reading chapter after chapter of a thick Chemistry textbook in SS3, feeling busy, feeling serious and then sitting in the exam and realising that half of what I had studied was not what NECO was asking at all.
That experience is the reason I built these notes the way I did. This NECO Chemistry Study Notes 2026 guide covers every section of the official NECO syllabus Physical Chemistry, Inorganic Chemistry, and Organic Chemistry in clear, simplified English. Every topic is explained the way a teacher explains it to a student sitting right in front of them, not the way a textbook presents it to nobody in particular.
Whether you are preparing as an SS3 candidate, a private candidate, or a resit student, this guide will show you what to study, why it matters for NECO, how the examiner tests it, and what mistakes you must avoid. Sit down, open your notebook, and let us get into it.
What This Guide Covers
Full NECO Chemistry syllabus breakdown all three sections
Physical Chemistry: states of matter, atomic structure, bonding, mole concept, equilibrium, electrochemistry
Inorganic Chemistry: periodic table, metals, non-metals, acids, bases, salts, gases
Organic Chemistry: hydrocarbons, functional groups, polymers, reactions
Practical Chemistry: laboratory safety, gas tests, titration, qualitative analysis
Common mistakes NECO candidates make and how to avoid them
Expert study strategies that actually work
Frequently asked questions with full answers
Understanding the NECO Chemistry Syllabus (2026)
Before you read a single Chemistry note, you need to understand how NECO structures the exam. The NECO Chemistry syllabus is divided into three major sections, and all three sections are tested in the exam.
| Section | Topic Area | What It Covers | Exam Focus |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Physical Chemistry | Gas laws, energy changes, rates of reaction, equilibrium, atomic structure | Calculations, theory, and problem-solving |
| 2 | Inorganic Chemistry | Periodic table, metals and non-metals, chemical bonding, acids and bases | Definitions, properties, reactions |
| 3 | Organic Chemistry | Hydrocarbons, functional groups, polymers, petroleum, organic reactions | Structures, naming, uses, reactions |
NECO tests these sections through three paper types: objective (multiple choice) questions, theory (structured and essay) questions, and practical or alternative-to-practical questions. Skipping any section is a gamble you cannot afford.
Many students ask me which section to start with. My honest answer: always start with Physical Chemistry. It is the foundation. If you do not understand atomic structure and chemical equations, topics like the mole concept, organic reactions, and electrolysis will feel impossible. Build the foundation first, then everything else follows.
To understand how NECO awards marks in each of these sections, I recommend reading the complete NECO marking scheme guide it shows you exactly what examiners look for before they award any mark.
PART ONE: Physical Chemistry (Simplified)
States of Matter
Matter exists in three common states: solid, liquid, and gas. NECO tests this topic regularly through objective questions on particle behaviour, and through theory questions asking you to explain changes of state.
| Aspect | Explanation |
|---|---|
| Topic | States of Matter |
| Definition | Matter exists in three common states: solid, liquid, and gas |
| Types of Matter | Solid, Liquid, Gas |
| Particle Behaviour | NECO tests how particles are arranged and move in each state |
| Changes of State | Questions may require explaining melting, freezing, evaporation, and condensation |
| NECO Exam Focus | Common in objective questions (particle behaviour) and theory questions (state changes explanation) |
NECO Exam Tip: NECO frequently asks you to explain changes of state in terms of particle behaviour, not just names. When answering, always mention what happens to particle energy and movement. For example: “During melting, particles gain enough energy to overcome the forces holding them in fixed positions, allowing them to move more freely.
Kinetic Theory of Matter
The kinetic theory states that all matter is made of tiny particles that are in constant motion. The speed of this motion depends on temperature. The higher the temperature, the faster the particles move, and the more energy they possess.
Key Points NECO Tests:
- Temperature is a measure of the average kinetic energy of particles
- Diffusion happens because particles move randomly and spread from high concentration to low concentration
- Brownian motion is the random movement of particles visible under a microscope (e.g. smoke particles in air)
- Heating increases particle speed; cooling decreases it.
Separation of Mixtures
NECO Chemistry consistently tests separation techniques. You must know not only the method but also which type of mixture each method is used for, and why it works.
| Method | Type of Mixture | Principle (Why It Works) | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Filtration | Insoluble solid + liquid | Particle size difference | Sand and water |
| Evaporation | Soluble solid + liquid | Liquid evaporates, solid remains | Salt solution |
| Distillation | Liquid + liquid / solution | Difference in boiling points | Water and alcohol |
| Fractional Distillation | Miscible liquids | Close boiling points, repeated vaporization | Crude oil separation |
| Decantation | Insoluble solid + liquid | Density difference (settling of heavier particles) | Muddy water |
| Separating Funnel | Immiscible liquids | Density difference, liquids do not mix | Oil and water |
| Chromatography | Components of a solution (solutes) | Different rates of movement/adsorption | Ink separation |
| Sublimation | Sublimable solid + non-sublimable | One solid turns directly to gas | Ammonium chloride and sand |
| Magnetic Separation | Magnetic + non-magnetic materials | Magnetic property | Iron filings and sand |
| Centrifugation | Fine suspended particles in liquid | Rapid spinning separates by density | Blood components |
Real-Life Example NECO Loves: Water purification in Nigeria involves filtration (to remove suspended particles) and distillation or chlorination (to remove dissolved impurities and kill germs). Expect this in theory questions.
Atomic Structure
Understanding the atom is fundamental to everything else in Chemistry. If you do not understand atomic structure, chemical bonding and the periodic table will not make sense.
The Atom is made up of three particles:
- Proton positive charge, found in the nucleus, relative mass = 1
- Neutron, no charge, found in the nucleus, relative mass = 1
- Electron, negative charge, found in shells around the nucleus, relative mass = negligible (1/1840)
Key Definitions:
- Atomic number (Z): number of protons in the nucleus
- Mass number (A): total number of protons + neutrons
- Number of neutrons = Mass number − Atomic number
- Isotopes: atoms of the same element with the same number of protons but different numbers of neutrons (e.g. Carbon-12 and Carbon-14)
Electronic Configuration: Electrons are arranged in shells. The first shell holds a maximum of 2 electrons, the second holds 8, the third holds 8 (for most NECO-level questions).
Example: Sodium (Na) — Atomic number 11 — Electronic configuration: 2, 8, 1
Example: Chlorine (Cl) — Atomic number 17 — Electronic configuration: 2, 8, 7
NECO Exam Tip: NECO regularly asks you to draw dot-and-cross diagrams showing electron arrangement. Practice drawing these for at least the first 20 elements of the periodic table.
Chemical Bonding
Chemical bonding explains how atoms join together to form compounds. NECO tests this through both objective and theory questions, and many students lose marks here by mixing up bond types.
Types of Chemical Bonds:
Ionic Bond (Electrovalent Bond)
Formed when one atom transfers electrons to another. This happens between metals and non-metals. The atom that loses electrons becomes a positive ion (cation); the atom that gains electrons becomes a negative ion (anion). The opposite charges attract each other.
Example: Sodium chloride (NaCl), Sodium loses one electron to Chlorine. Na becomes Na⁺, Cl becomes Cl⁻.
Properties of ionic compounds: high melting point, conduct electricity when dissolved in water or melted, soluble in water.
Covalent Bond
Formed when two non-metal atoms share electrons. Each shared pair of electrons forms one covalent bond.
- Single bond: one shared pair (e.g. H₂, Cl₂, HCl)
- Double bond: two shared pairs (e.g. O₂, CO₂)
- Triple bond: three shared pairs (e.g. N₂)Properties: usually low melting point, do not conduct electricity (except graphite), may be soluble or insoluble in water.
Metallic Bond
Found in metals. Metal atoms release their outer electrons into a “sea” of delocalised electrons. These free electrons hold the positive metal ions together and allow electricity to conduct.
| Aspect | Metallic Bond |
|---|---|
| Definition | A bond found in metals where atoms release outer electrons into a shared “sea” |
| Where It Occurs | In metals |
| Particle Involved | Positive metal ions and delocalised (free) electrons |
| How It Forms | Metal atoms lose outer electrons, forming positive ions |
| Nature of Bonding | Electrostatic attraction between ions and free electrons |
| Key Feature | Presence of a “sea” of delocalised electrons |
| Electrical Conductivity | Conducts electricity due to movement of free electrons |
| Strength | Generally strong due to attraction between ions and electrons |
The Mole Concept and Stoichiometry
The mole concept is one of the most important topics in NECO Chemistry, and one of the most feared. I want to tell you something: the mole concept is not as difficult as people make it sound. Once you understand the logic, calculation questions become straightforward.
What is a Mole?
A mole is the unit chemists use to count particles (atoms, molecules, or ions). One mole of any substance contains 6.02 × 10²³ particles. This number is called Avogadro’s number
Key Mole Formulae (Learn These Completely):
- Number of moles = Mass (g) ÷ Molar mass (g/mol)
- Number of moles = Volume of gas (dm³) ÷ 22.4 (at STP) or ÷ 24 (at room temperature)
- Number of moles = Concentration (mol/dm³) × Volume (dm³)
- Number of particles = Number of moles × 6.02 × 10²³
Worked Example (the type NECO sets):
Calculate the number of moles in 36 g of water (H₂O).
Molar mass of H₂O = (2 × 1) + 16 = 18 g/mol
Number of moles = 36 ÷ 18 = 2 moles
Stoichiometry (Balancing Equations):
A balanced chemical equation has the same number of atoms of each element on both sides. NECO regularly asks you to balance equations and use them for mole calculations.
Example: N₂ + 3H₂ → 2NH₃
This means 1 mole of nitrogen reacts with 3 moles of hydrogen to produce 2 moles of ammonia.
NECO Exam Tip: Always write the unit for every answer in calculation questions. If you calculate moles, write “mol.” If you calculate mass, write “g.” Missing units can cost you marks.
Acids, Bases, and Salts
This topic appears in almost every NECO Chemistry exam, in both objective and theory sections. You must understand definitions, properties, reactions, and the preparation of salts.
Definitions:
- Acid: A substance that donates hydrogen ions (H⁺) in solution. Acids turn blue litmus paper red and have pH below 7.
- Base: A substance that accepts hydrogen ions. Bases are metal oxides or hydroxides.
- Alkali: A base that dissolves in water to form OH⁻ ions. Alkalis turn red litmus paper blue and have pH above 7.
- Salt: The product formed when an acid reacts with a base (neutralisation reaction).
| Term | Definition | Key Properties |
|---|---|---|
| Acid | A substance that donates hydrogen ions (H⁺) in solution. | Turns blue litmus red; pH below 7 |
| Base | A substance that accepts hydrogen ions. | Usually metal oxides or hydroxides |
| Alkali | A base that dissolves in water to form OH⁻ ions. | Turns red litmus blue; pH above 7 |
| Salt | A product formed when an acid reacts with a base (neutralisation). | Formed from acid + base reaction |
pH Scale: The pH scale runs from 0 to 14. Values below 7 are acidic, 7 is neutral, and above 7 is alkaline. NECO often tests you on interpreting pH values and identifying indicators.
Common indicators: Litmus (red in acid, blue in alkali), Universal indicator (full colour range), Phenolphthalein (colourless in acid, pink in alkali), Methyl orange (red in acid, yellow in alkali).
Rates of Reaction and Chemical Equilibrium
Rate of Reaction refers to how fast or slow a chemical reaction takes place. NECO tests the factors that affect reaction rate.
Factors That Increase Rate of Reaction:
- Temperature: Higher temperature increases particle energy and frequency of collisions
- Concentration: More concentrated solutions have more particles per unit volume, increasing collisions
- Surface area: Smaller particle size (powder vs lump) increases surface area for reactions
- Catalyst: Lowers the activation energy needed for the reaction without being consumed
- Pressure: Affects gases higher pressure increases collision frequency
Chemical Equilibrium (Le Chatelier’s Principle):
A reversible reaction reaches equilibrium when the forward and backward reactions occur at the same rate. Le Chatelier’s Principle states: if you change the conditions of an equilibrium, the reaction will shift to oppose that change.
Haber Process Example (NECO loves this):
N₂ + 3H₂ ⇌ 2NH₃ + heat
Increasing temperature shifts equilibrium to the LEFT (less ammonia)
Increasing pressure shifts equilibrium to the RIGHT (more ammonia, fewer moles of gas)
Adding catalyst: does not shift equilibrium, only speeds up how fast it is reached
Electrochemistry
Electrochemistry covers electrolysis and electrochemical cells. This is a high-scoring topic that many students avoid which means answering it well gives you an advantage.
Electrolysis is the decomposition of a compound using electric current. The compound must be in molten or aqueous (dissolved) form to conduct electricity.
Key Terms:
Electrolyte: The ionic compound that is decomposed
Anode: Positive electrode oxidation occurs here (anions lose electrons)
Cathode: Negative electrode reduction occurs here (cations gain electrons)
Products of Electrolysis (Common NECO Examples):
| Topic | Explanation | Exam Tip |
|---|---|---|
| Electrochemistry | Study of chemical reactions involving electricity (electrolysis & cells) | Very high-scoring if well understood |
| Electrolysis | Decomposition of a compound using electric current | Must be molten or aqueous |
| Term | Meaning | What to Remember for Exam |
|---|---|---|
| Electrolyte | Ionic compound that conducts electricity when molten or dissolved | Must contain free ions |
| Anode | Positive electrode where oxidation occurs | Anions go here (lose electrons) |
| Cathode | Negative electrode where reduction occurs | Cations go here (gain electrons) |
| Electrolyte | State | Cathode Product | Anode Product | Key Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Molten NaCl | Molten | Sodium (Na) | Chlorine gas (Cl₂) | No water involved |
| Aqueous NaCl (Brine) | Solution | Hydrogen gas (H₂) | Chlorine gas (Cl₂) | Water affects products |
| Dilute H₂SO₄ | Solution | Hydrogen gas (H₂) | Oxygen gas (O₂) | Water is electrolyzed |
| CuSO₄ (using inert electrodes) | Solution | Copper (Cu) | Oxygen (O₂) | Cu²⁺ is discharged |
| CuSO₄ (using copper electrodes) | Solution | Copper (Cu) | Copper (Cu) | Electrodes participate |
Industrial Applications of Electrolysis (NECO Theory Questions):
- Extraction of aluminium from bauxite
- Purification of copper
- Electroplating of metals (e.g. silver-plating spoons)
- Production of chlorine and sodium hydroxide from brine (Chlor-alkali industry)
Students who understand the full scope of how NECO tests Chemistry calculations are always at an advantage. I strongly recommend combining these notes with the data-driven JAMB Chemistry topic repetition index the exam patterns there overlap significantly with NECO, especially in Physical Chemistry.
PART TWO: Inorganic Chemistry (Simplified)
The Periodic Table
The periodic table organises all elements by increasing atomic number. NECO tests your understanding of trends, group properties, and period properties not just memorisation of element positions.
Structure of the Periodic Table:
Periods: Horizontal rows (Period 1 to Period 7). Going across a period, atomic number increases by one.
Groups: Vertical columns (Group 1 to Group 0/18). Elements in the same group have the same number of outer electrons and similar chemical properties.
Important Trends Across a Period (Left to Right):
Atomic radius decreases
Ionisation energy increases
Electronegativity increases
Metallic character decreases; non-metallic character increases
Important Trends Down a Group:
Atomic radius increases
Ionisation energy decreases
Reactivity of metals increases (Group 1)
Reactivity of non-metals decreases (Group 7)
Group 1 Alkali Metals (Li, Na, K, Rb, Cs, Fr):
Soft metals, low melting points
React vigorously with water to form hydrogen gas and an alkali (e.g. 2Na + 2H₂O → 2NaOH + H₂)
Reactivity increases down the group (Francium is most reactive)
Stored in oil to prevent reaction with air and moisture
And Group 7 Halogens (F, Cl, Br, I, At):
Non-metals, exist as diatomic molecules (F₂, Cl₂, Br₂, I₂)
React with metals to form salts called halides
Reactivity decreases down the group (Fluorine is most reactive)
Displacement reactions: a more reactive halogen displaces a less reactive one from its salt solution (e.g. Cl₂ + 2KBr → 2KCl + Br₂)
<strong>Group 0 Noble Gases (He, Ne, Ar, Kr, Xe, Rn):
Very unreactive full outer electron shells
Monatomic gases
Uses: Helium in balloons, Argon in light bulbs, Neon in signs
Metals and Non-Metals
| Property | Metals | Non-Metals |
|---|---|---|
| Appearance | Shiny (lustrous) | Dull (non-lustrous) |
| State at Room Temperature | Mostly solid (except mercury) | Solid, liquid, or gas |
| Malleability | Malleable (can be hammered into sheets) | Not malleable (brittle if solid) |
| Ductility | Ductile (can be drawn into wires) | Not ductile |
| Conductivity | Good conductors of heat and electricity | Poor conductors (except graphite) |
| Density | High density | Low density |
| Melting & Boiling Points | Generally high | Generally low |
| Sonority | Sonorous (produce sound when struck) | Non-sonorous |
| Chemical Behavior | Lose electrons to form positive ions (cations) | Gain electrons to form negative ions (anions) |
| Reaction with Oxygen | Form basic oxides | Form acidic or neutral oxides |
| Examples | Iron, Copper, Aluminium, Zinc | Oxygen, Nitrogen, Sulfur, Carbon |
Reactivity Series of Metals
The reactivity series ranks metals from most reactive to least reactive. NECO uses this to test displacement reactions, extraction methods, and corrosion.
Most reactive → Least reactive: K, Na, Ca, Mg, Al, Zn, Fe, Pb, (H), Cu, Ag, Au, Pt
Key Rules from the Reactivity Series:
- A more reactive metal displaces a less reactive one from its salt solution (e.g. Zn + CuSO₄ → ZnSO₄ + Cu)
- Metals above hydrogen react with dilute acids to produce hydrogen gas
- Metals below hydrogen do not react with dilute acids
Extraction of Metals
| Metal | Main Ore | Method of Extraction | Key Process / Explanation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sodium (Na) | Rock salt (NaCl) | Electrolysis | Molten NaCl is electrolyzed to produce sodium metal and chlorine gas |
| Calcium (Ca) | Limestone (CaCO₃) | Electrolysis | Molten calcium chloride is electrolyzed |
| Aluminium (Al) | Bauxite (Al₂O₃) | Electrolysis (Hall-Héroult Process) | Alumina dissolved in molten cryolite and electrolyzed |
| Zinc (Zn) | Zinc blende (ZnS) | Roasting + Reduction | ZnS is roasted to ZnO, then reduced with carbon |
| Iron (Fe) | Haematite (Fe₂O₃) | Blast Furnace (Reduction) | Iron ore reduced using coke in a blast furnace |
| Lead (Pb) | Galena (PbS) | Roasting + Reduction | PbS roasted to PbO, then reduced to lead |
| Copper (Cu) | Copper pyrites (CuFeS₂) | Roasting + Smelting + Electrolysis | Sulphide ore is concentrated, roasted, then purified electrolytically |
| Mercury (Hg) | Cinnabar (HgS) | Roasting | HgS heated in air to produce mercury vapor |
| Silver (Ag) | Argentite (Ag₂S) | Cyanide Process | Silver dissolved in NaCN, then recovered |
| Gold (Au) | Native gold | Cyanide Process | Gold extracted using sodium cyanide solution |
Extraction of Iron — Blast Furnace (NECO Theory Favourite):
Raw materials: Iron ore (haematite, Fe₂O₃), coke (carbon), limestone (CaCO₃), hot air
Coke burns to form CO₂: C + O₂ → CO₂
CO₂ reacts with more coke: CO₂ + C → 2CO
Carbon monoxide reduces iron ore: Fe₂O₃ + 3CO → 2Fe + 3CO₂
Limestone removes impurities (slag): CaCO₃ → CaO + CO₂; CaO + SiO₂ → CaSiO₃ (slag)
Air, Water, and Pollution
Composition of Clean, Dry Air:
| Component of Air | Percentage (%) by Volume | Description / Function |
|---|---|---|
| Nitrogen (N₂) | 78% | Inert gas; does not easily react, helps dilute oxygen and prevent rapid combustion |
| Oxygen (O₂) | 21% | Supports respiration and combustion in living organisms |
| Argon (Ar) | 0.93% | Noble gas; chemically inactive |
| Carbon dioxide (CO₂) | 0.04% | Used by plants for photosynthesis; helps regulate Earth’s temperature |
| Neon (Ne) | 0.0018% | Noble gas; used in lighting (neon signs) |
| Helium (He) | 0.0005% | Light gas; used in balloons and scientific applications |
| Methane (CH₄) | 0.0002% | Greenhouse gas; contributes to global warming |
| Krypton (Kr) | 0.0001% | Rare noble gas; used in specialized lighting |
| Hydrogen (H₂) | 0.00005% | Very light gas; highly flammable |
| Xenon (Xe) | 0.000009% | Rare noble gas; used in lamps and medical imaging |
Air Pollutants and Their Effects (NECO Tests This Regularly):
| Air Pollutant | Main Sources | Effects on Health | Effects on Environment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Carbon Monoxide (CO) | Incomplete combustion from vehicles, generators, burning fuel | Reduces oxygen in blood, headache, dizziness, can cause death | Contributes to air pollution, harmful to animals |
| Sulphur Dioxide (SO₂) | Burning of coal and oil, industrial processes | Irritates lungs, causes breathing problems | Causes acid rain, damages crops and buildings |
| Nitrogen Dioxide (NO₂) | Vehicle exhaust, power plants | Lung irritation, worsens asthma | Forms acid rain and smog |
| Carbon Dioxide (CO₂) | Burning fossil fuels, deforestation | Causes breathing issues at high levels | Leads to global warming (greenhouse effect) |
| Particulate Matter (Smoke, Dust) | Bush burning, factories, construction | Causes lung diseases, eye irritation | Reduces visibility, affects plant growth |
| Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) | Refrigerators, aerosols, air conditioners | Not directly harmful to humans at low levels | Depletes ozone layer → increases UV radiation |
| Methane (CH₄) | Decomposition of waste, livestock, swamps | Can cause breathing difficulty in high amounts | Contributes to global warming |
| Ozone (O₃) (Ground level) | Reaction of pollutants under sunlight | Chest pain, throat irritation | Damages crops and plants |
Water Purification Steps:
Sedimentation: particles settle to the bottom
Filtration: removes remaining suspended particles
Chlorination: kills bacteria and germs
Hard water is water that contains dissolved calcium and magnesium salts. It prevents lathering with soap. Temporary hardness is removed by boiling; permanent hardness requires ion exchange or adding sodium carbonate.
PART THREE: Organic Chemistry (Simplified)
Introduction to Organic Chemistry
Organic chemistry is the study of carbon compounds. Carbon is unique because it can form four bonds, creating chains, rings, and branched structures. Almost every substance involved in living things fuels, plastics, medicines, food contains carbon.
The study of organic chemistry begins with understanding the homologous series: families of organic compounds with the same general formula, similar chemical properties, and properties that change gradually as the chain gets longer.
Hydrocarbons: Alkanes, Alkenes, and Alkynes
Hydrocarbons are compounds containing only hydrogen and carbon.
Alkanes (saturated hydrocarbons):
General formula: CₙH₂ₙ₊₂
Only single bonds between carbon atoms
Not very reactive relatively stable
Main reaction: combustion and substitution (with halogens in UV light)
| Topic | Details |
|---|---|
| Hydrocarbons | Compounds containing only hydrogen and carbon atoms |
| Alkanes (Saturated Hydrocarbons) | A class of hydrocarbons with single bonds only |
| General Formula | CₙH₂ₙ₊₂ |
| Bond Type | Only single bonds between carbon atoms |
| Reactivity | Not very reactive; relatively stable |
| Main Reactions | Combustion and substitution (with halogens in UV light) |
Alkenes (unsaturated hydrocarbons):
General formula: CₙH₂ₙ
Contain at least one carbon-carbon double bond (C=C)
More reactive than alkanes
Main reactions: addition reactions (with H₂, Cl₂, HCl, H₂O), polymerisation
Test for alkenes: decolourise bromine water (turns from orange/brown to colourless)
Examples: Ethene (C₂H₄), Propene (C₃H₆), Butene (C₄H₈)
Alkynes:
General formula: CₙH₂ₙ₋₂
Contain a carbon-carbon triple bond (C≡C)
Example: Ethyne (acetylene, C₂H₂) used in welding torches
NECO Exam Tip: A question that asks you to distinguish between an alkane and an alkene the answer is always the bromine water test. Alkenes decolourise bromine water; alkanes do not.
Functional Groups in Organic Chemistry
A functional group is the part of an organic molecule that determines its chemical behaviour. NECO tests functional groups through identification questions, reactions, and naming.
| Functional Group | General Formula | Example Compound | Example Formula | Key Characteristics / Reactions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alkane | CₙH₂ₙ₊₂ | Methane | CH₄ | Saturated; single bonds; less reactive |
| Alkene | CₙH₂ₙ | Ethene | C₂H₄ | Contains C=C; undergoes addition reactions |
| Alkyne | CₙH₂ₙ₋₂ | Ethyne | C₂H₂ | Contains C≡C; highly reactive |
| Alcohol | –OH | Ethanol | C₂H₅OH | Undergoes oxidation; forms esters |
| Carboxylic Acid | –COOH | Ethanoic acid | CH₃COOH | Acidic; reacts with bases and alcohols |
| Ester | –COO– | Ethyl ethanoate | CH₃COOC₂H₅ | Pleasant smell; formed from acid + alcohol |
| Aldehyde | –CHO | Methanal | HCHO | Easily oxidized to acids |
| Ketone | –CO– | Propanone | CH₃COCH₃ | Resistant to oxidation |
| Amine | –NH₂ | Methylamine | CH₃NH₂ | Basic; reacts with acids |
| Amide | –CONH₂ | Ethanamide | CH₃CONH₂ | Derived from acids; forms proteins |
| Haloalkane | –X (Cl, Br, I) | Chloroethane | C₂H₅Cl | Undergo substitution reactions |
Making an Ester (Esterification) NECO Loves This:
Alcohol + Carboxylic Acid → Ester + Water (in the presence of concentrated H₂SO₄ as catalyst)
CH₃COOH + C₂H₅OH → CH₃COOC₂H₅ + H₂O
(Ethanoic acid + Ethanol → Ethyl ethanoate + Water)
Polymers and Plastics
A polymer is a large molecule made by joining many small molecules (monomers) together. This process is called polymerisation.
Two Types of Polymerisation:
Addition polymerisation: Unsaturated monomers (alkenes) join together. No other substance is produced. Example: ethene → polyethene (polythene).
Condensation polymerisation: Monomers join together and a small molecule (usually water) is released. Example: nylon, polyester.
| Concept | Explanation | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Polymer | A large molecule formed by joining many small molecules called monomers | Polyethene (Polythene), Nylon |
| Monomer | Small molecules that combine to form polymers | Ethene |
| Polymerisation | The process of joining monomers together to form a polymer | Ethene → Polyethene |
| Type | Description | Key Feature | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Addition Polymerisation | Unsaturated monomers (alkenes) join together | No by-product is formed | Ethene → Polyethene |
| Condensation Polymerisation | Monomers join together to form a polymer | Small molecule (e.g., water) is released | Nylon, Polyester |
Environmental Effect of Plastics (NECO Theory): Most synthetic polymers are non-biodegradable they do not break down naturally. This causes land and water pollution. NECO expects you to discuss both advantages (durability, low cost) and disadvantages (environmental hazard) of plastics.
PART FOUR: Chemistry Practical and Alternative-to-Practical
Laboratory Safety Rules
NECO frequently tests laboratory safety in both objective and practical papers. These rules are not just common sense they carry real marks.
- Always wear safety goggles when handling chemicals
- Never taste or smell chemicals directly waft fumes carefully with your hand
- Tie back long hair and avoid loose clothing near flames
- Label all containers clearly before use
- Never pour water into concentrated acid always add acid to water slowly
- Know the location of fire extinguishers and first aid equipment in the lab
- Wash hands thoroughly after every laboratory session
- Report all accidents and chemical spills to the teacher immediately
Gas Tests (Learn All of These)
Gas identification is one of the most tested areas in NECO Chemistry practical. You must know both the test method and the expected observation.
| Gas | Test Method | Observation | Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|
| Oxygen (O₂) | Insert a glowing splint into the gas | The glowing splint relights | Oxygen is present |
| Hydrogen (H₂) | Bring a lighted splint near the gas | Burns with a “pop” sound | Hydrogen is present |
| Carbon dioxide (CO₂) | Bubble gas through limewater | Limewater turns milky | Carbon dioxide is present |
| Ammonia (NH₃) | Bring moist red litmus paper near the gas | Red litmus turns blue | Ammonia is present |
| Chlorine (Cl₂) | Place damp blue litmus paper in the gas | Litmus turns red, then bleaches white | Chlorine is present |
| Sulfur dioxide (SO₂) | Pass gas through acidified potassium dichromate(VI) solution | Orange solution turns green | Sulfur dioxide is present |
| Hydrogen chloride (HCl) | Bring a glass rod dipped in ammonia solution near the gas | Dense white fumes form | Hydrogen chloride is present |
| Nitrogen dioxide (NO₂) | Observe the gas directly | Reddish-brown gas with choking smell | Nitrogen dioxide is present |
| Water vapour (Steam) | Pass gas over cobalt(II) chloride paper | Blue paper turns pink | Water vapour is present |
Qualitative Analysis Identifying Ions
NECO practical questions often ask you to identify unknown ions in a solution. Below are the standard tests.
Flame Tests for Metal Ions:
| Ion | Test Reagent | Observation | Inference (Conclusion) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cu²⁺ (Copper II) | NaOH (aq) added dropwise | Light blue precipitate | Copper(II) ion present |
| Fe²⁺ (Iron II) | NaOH (aq) added | Dirty green precipitate (turns brown on standing) | Iron(II) ion present |
| Fe³⁺ (Iron III) | NaOH (aq) added | Reddish-brown precipitate | Iron(III) ion present |
| Al³⁺ (Aluminium) | NaOH (aq) added, then excess | White precipitate soluble in excess | Aluminium ion present |
| Zn²⁺ (Zinc) | NaOH (aq) added, then excess | White precipitate soluble in excess | Zinc ion present |
| Ca²⁺ (Calcium) | NaOH (aq) added | White precipitate (insoluble in excess) | Calcium ion present |
| NH₄⁺ (Ammonium) | Warm with NaOH (aq) | Ammonia gas evolved (turns red litmus blue) | Ammonium ion present |
| SO₄²⁻ (Sulfate) | BaCl₂ (aq) + dilute HCl | White precipitate (insoluble in acid) | Sulfate ion present |
| CO₃²⁻ (Carbonate) | Add dilute HCl | Effervescence; gas turns limewater milky | Carbonate ion present |
| Cl⁻ (Chloride) | AgNO₃ (aq) + dilute HNO₃ | White precipitate | Chloride ion present |
| Br⁻ (Bromide) | AgNO₃ (aq) + dilute HNO₃ | Cream precipitate | Bromide ion present |
| I⁻ (Iodide) | AgNO₃ (aq) + dilute HNO₃ | Yellow precipitate | Iodide ion present |
| NO₃⁻ (Nitrate) | Warm with NaOH + Al foil | Ammonia gas evolved | Nitrate ion present |
Titration
Titration is used to find the concentration of an unknown solution. NECO tests both the procedure and the calculation.
Procedure:
- Rinse burette with the acid solution and fill it, recording the initial reading
- Use a pipette to transfer a fixed volume of alkali into a conical flask
- Add two drops of indicator to the flask
- Add acid from the burette slowly, swirling the flask continuously
- Stop when the indicator changes colour permanently (the endpoint)
- Record the final burette reading; calculate the titre (volume of acid used)
- Repeat to obtain concordant results (readings within 0.10 cm³ of each other)
Titration Calculation Formula:
Moles of known substance = Concentration × Volume (in dm³)
Use the mole ratio from the balanced equation to find moles of unknown.
Concentration of unknown = Moles ÷ Volume (in dm³)
Understanding how NECO marks practical work is just as important as knowing the procedure. The WAEC Biology Practical Marking Scheme guide on this blog gives a clear picture of how examiners award marks for practical answers the same principles apply to NECO Chemistry practical.
Common Mistakes NECO Chemistry Candidates Make (And How to Fix Them)
I have seen the same mistakes repeated year after year, and the sad truth is that most of them are avoidable. Let me take you through them one by one.
1. Memorising without understanding
Chemistry is not a subject you cram and forget. When you do not understand why a reaction happens, one small twist in the question will confuse you. NECO examiners deliberately rephrase familiar topics. If you only memorised the definition of an acid, but you do not understand what happens during neutralisation at the particle level, you will struggle with applied questions.
2. Skipping practical chemistry
Many students treat the practical section as secondary. I made this mistake myself, and I lost easy marks. NECO awards significant marks for practical gas tests, safety rules, titration procedures, and qualitative analysis. These are marks you can guarantee if you prepare.
3. Not showing workings in calculation questions
Even if your final answer is wrong, NECO awards marks for correct working steps. A student who writes the correct formula and substitutes values correctly, but makes an arithmetic error at the final step, can still earn most of the marks. A student who writes only a final answer and it is wrong gets nothing.
4. Ignoring command words
When a question says “State,” write a simple fact. And When it says “Explain,” give a reason. When it says “Describe,” walk through the procedure or observation step by step. Mixing these up costs marks, even when you know the content.
5. Poor time management
NECO Chemistry papers have many questions, and students sometimes spend too long on one question and leave others blank. Blank answers score zero always attempt every question, even partially.
For a broader strategy that covers all your exam subjects, the Zero-Failure Blueprint for JAMB, WAEC, NECO, and NABTEB breaks down a complete exam success system that works across all these examinations.
Expert Study Strategies for NECO Chemistry
Hard work is necessary, but smart work is what separates students who pass from those who score distinctions. Here is what works.
Study topic by topic, not randomly
Chemistry builds on itself. Start with atomic structure, then move to bonding, then to the mole concept. Jumping from organic chemistry back to electrolysis without a foundation will leave gaps that NECO will find.
Practice past questions every week
NECO repeats patterns more than people realise. Each past question you solve trains your mind to recognise how the examiner thinks. Consistent practice is the single best preparation strategy there is. Use our JAMB Chemistry Topic Repetition Index to identify which Chemistry topics appear most often many of these patterns overlap with NECO.
Draw diagrams regularly
From laboratory setups for electrolysis to molecular structures for organic compounds, drawing helps you remember. NECO awards marks for correct, labelled diagrams. Practice drawing the blast furnace, the electrolytic cell, and laboratory glassware setups.
Write your own summary notes
After reading each section of this guide, close it and write down everything you can remember in your own words. If you can explain it without reading, you truly understand it.
Teach someone else
Find a classmate or sibling and explain a Chemistry topic to them. Teaching forces you to organise your thinking and exposes gaps you did not know existed.
Connect Chemistry to real life
NECO loves real-life application questions. Why is iron extracted using a blast furnace? And why is aluminium extracted by electrolysis? Why do alkenes decolourise bromine water? When you understand the real-world reason, you stop depending on memorisation.
Also see the JAMB Syllabus Explained Subject by Subject guide to understand how exam syllabuses are structured across different examination bodies this context helps you study with better direction.
And if you want to understand how to manage your exam preparation across multiple subjects at the same time especially if you are sitting both NECO and JAMB the JAMB Exam Day Checklist 2026 covers everything you need to have in order before you walk into any examination hall.
Who These NECO Chemistry Study Notes Are Designed For
- SS3 students preparing for NECO 2026
- Private candidates and resit students
- Chemistry teachers preparing simplified lesson notes
- Parents supporting children’s home study
- WAEC candidates looking for clearer Chemistry revision (the syllabuses overlap significantly)
- Students who failed NECO Chemistry and want to understand why and how to fix it
The full complete guide to JAMB, WAEC, NECO, and NABTEB in Nigeria gives broader context about each examination body and what they demand from candidates read the complete JAMB, WAEC, NECO, and NABTEB guide if you are navigating multiple exams this year.
Frequently Asked Questions (NECO Chemistry Study Notes 2026)
Is NECO Chemistry difficult to pass?
NECO Chemistry is not difficult when you study with the right notes. Most students fail because they use the wrong materials or skip practical chemistry. With simplified, syllabus-aligned notes and regular past question practice, you can pass comfortably and even score a distinction.
How many topics are in the NECO Chemistry syllabus?
The NECO Chemistry syllabus covers three major sections: Physical Chemistry, Inorganic Chemistry, and Organic Chemistry. Each section contains multiple topics tested through objective questions, theory questions, and practical or alternative-to-practical questions.
Are calculations compulsory in NECO Chemistry?
Yes. Calculations appear in both the objective and theory papers. The mole concept, stoichiometry, gas laws, and concentration problems are frequently tested. You cannot pass NECO Chemistry by avoiding calculations.
Does NECO Chemistry include practical questions?
Yes. NECO sets either a full practical paper or an alternative-to-practical (ATP) section. These questions test your knowledge of laboratory procedures, chemical tests, observations, and safety rules. Treating practical chemistry as secondary is one of the costliest mistakes candidates make.
What topics repeat most in NECO Chemistry?
Topics that repeat consistently in NECO Chemistry include the mole concept, acids and bases, electrolysis, periodic table trends, organic functional groups, gas tests in the laboratory, and chemical bonding. These should be your priority areas.
Can I use these notes for WAEC Chemistry as well?
Yes. NECO and WAEC Chemistry syllabuses are very similar in structure. These notes cover topics that appear in both exams, so WAEC candidates will also benefit from studying with this guide.
Conclusion: Your Complete NECO Chemistry 2026 Success Blueprint
Chemistry is not the enemy. Bad notes are. Wrong study methods are. Lack of preparation is. The subject itself, when taught clearly and studied correctly, is manageable for every serious student.
This NECO Chemistry Study Notes 2026 guide covers every section of the syllabus Physical Chemistry from atomic structure to electrochemistry, Inorganic Chemistry from the periodic table to metal extraction, Organic Chemistry from hydrocarbons to polymers, and Practical Chemistry from gas tests to titration. Every topic is explained the way it actually appears in the exam, not the way it appears in a textbook written for university lecturers.
Study this guide topic by topic. Practice past questions. Write your own summary notes after each section. Teach what you have learned to someone else. And remember: NECO does not reward the student who reads the most it rewards the student who understands best and answers most clearly.
For further exam preparation support across all your subjects, visit the top JAMB exam tips guide and bookmark ExamGuideNG as your daily revision companion. You can do this. Go and prepare well.
References
- National Examinations Council (NECO)
- Nigerian Educational Research and Development Council (NERDC)
- Khan Academy Chemistry
- Royal Society of Chemistry
Written by Massodih Okon, Senior Exam Preparation Researcher and Academic Education Content Specialist. Massodih holds a First Degree in Geography and a Master’s Degree in Urban and Regional Planning from the University of Uyo. He is a published researcher in the Journal of Environmental Design (Volume 16, No. 1, 2021, pp. 127–134). All content is written in alignment with the official NECO Chemistry syllabus and reviewed for accuracy, relevance, and exam-focus. Last reviewed: March 2026.
