Flashcard generator
Drill functional groups, reagents, conditions, and periodic trends from a chapter.
Open Flashcard generator →Chemistry is heavy on vocabulary, named reactions, and trends that students confuse under time pressure: oxidation versus reduction, exothermic versus endothermic, periodic trends that point in opposite directions across the table. The math part of chemistry rewards drill, the conceptual part rewards careful diagrams, and the lab part rewards remembering which conditions a reaction actually needs. Studii works with the typical chemistry source set: general or organic chemistry textbooks, lecture slides, lab notebooks, and recorded class sessions. Paste a section here for a quick artifact, or upload the full chapter in Studii to keep notes, quizzes, and flashcards linked to the same source.
Start freeDrill functional groups, reagents, conditions, and periodic trends from a chapter.
Open Flashcard generator →Organize a full chapter into topics, key terms, worked examples, and practice prompts.
Open Study guide generator →Untangle ideas like equilibrium, Le Chatelier's principle, or reaction kinetics.
Open Concept explainer →Mix definition recall with application questions on graphs and reaction outcomes.
Open Quiz generator →Build comparison cards for opposing trends like electronegativity versus atomic radius instead of memorizing each in isolation.
For organic chemistry, group reagents by what they do to a functional group rather than by chapter order.
Practice stoichiometry from worked examples in your notes so the practice problems match the test format.
Turn lab procedure notes into a quiz: what variable did each step control and why.
Write a one-line summary of each named reaction before making flashcards on its conditions.
Paste a section like this here, or upload the full source in Studii for better coverage.
Paste a section like this here, or upload the full source in Studii for better coverage.
Paste a section like this here, or upload the full source in Studii for better coverage.
Pasted text produces text-based cards and notes. For mechanism arrows, upload the textbook chapter as a PDF in Studii so the figures stay with the source.
It can drill the underlying definitions and reproduce worked examples in quiz form. For numeric drill, the quiz generator produces practice prompts based on your notes.
Both. Output follows the level of the source. AP Chemistry, A Level, IB, and general college chemistry all work when the notes match the course.
Yes, especially for functional groups, reagent summaries, and named reactions. Mechanism-heavy work is still better with the original textbook open alongside.
Upload once. Generate notes, quiz questions, flashcards, and podcasts from the same source.