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Award-Winning Physical Chemistry Tutors

Amanda

Certified Tutor

15+ years

Amanda

Bachelor of Science, Biology, General
Amanda's other Tutor Subjects
Calculus
Algebra
Physical Chemistry
Chemistry

I am a public school teacher (Chemistry and Living Environment) but can tutor most sciences. I truly believe in differentiated learning and once I know the learning style of a student, I tailor my teaching style for optimum time usage. I love to utilize stories from my real life experiences in labs ...

Education

Hofstra University

Bachelor of Science, Biology, General

Test Scores
SAT
1450
Maha

Certified Tutor

Maha

Bachelor in Arts, Chemistry, Biology
Maha's other Tutor Subjects
Pre-Algebra
Trigonometry
Middle School Math
Geometry

Two years as an organic chemistry lab TA at the college level gave Maha hands-on experience with the reaction kinetics and thermodynamic reasoning that form the backbone of any p-chem sequence. Now pursuing graduate work in public health at Johns Hopkins, she approaches topics like equilibrium const...

Education

Johns Hopkins University

Bachelor in Arts, Chemistry, Biology

Test Scores
SAT
1510

Certified Tutor

10+ years

Michael

Bachelors, Physics
Michael's other Tutor Subjects
Pre-Algebra
College Algebra
Algebra 3/4
Pre-Calculus

Having studied quantum mechanics and electromagnetism as part of his physics degree, Michael already speaks the mathematical language that makes p-chem so demanding — the wave equations, the statistical distributions, the calculus buried inside every thermodynamic derivation. He teaches from the phy...

Education

Lawrence University

Bachelors, Physics

Test Scores
SAT
1430

Certified Tutor

6+ years

Austin

Bachelor of Science, Chemistry
Austin's other Tutor Subjects
Calculus
Algebra
Physical Chemistry
Organic Chemistry

As an MD/PhD student at Northwestern with a chemistry PhD focus and a B.S. in Chemical Science from Michigan, Austin has gone deep on the thermodynamics and quantum mechanics that form p-chem's backbone — and he's still actively working through advanced coursework in these areas. He tackles derivati...

Education

University of Michigan-Ann Arbor

Bachelor of Science, Chemistry

Test Scores
ACT
34

Certified Tutor

5+ years

Allyson

Master of Science, Biomedical Engineering
Allyson's other Tutor Subjects
Calculus
Algebra
Engineering
AP Chemistry

Two biomedical engineering degrees mean Allyson has been doing the calculus-heavy thermodynamics and kinetics work that p-chem formalizes — modeling energy transfer in biological systems, working through rate equations for physiological processes — since undergrad. She zeroes in on the specific math...

Education

Syracuse University

Master of Science, Biomedical Engineering

Syracuse University

Bachelor of Science, Biomedical Engineering

Test Scores
ACT
33

Certified Tutor

5+ years

Cory

Bachelor of Science, Physics
Cory's other Tutor Subjects
AP Calculus BC
AP Calculus AB
Pre-Algebra
Linear Algebra

A physics degree gives Cory something many p-chem tutors lack — native comfort with the quantum mechanics and statistical mechanics that chemistry students often encounter for the first time in this course. He treats topics like wave functions, partition functions, and thermodynamic state variables ...

Education

University of Washington

Bachelor of Science, Physics

Certified Tutor

Tom

PHD, Biophysical Chemistry
Tom's other Tutor Subjects
10th-12th Grade Math
AP Calculus BC
AP Calculus AB
College Algebra

A PhD in biophysical chemistry means Tom didn't just survive p-chem — he built a research career on it, working at the intersection of thermodynamics, quantum mechanics, and molecular behavior where the math has to be airtight. He treats the subject like a language students need to actively speak: d...

Education

Stanford University

PHD, Biophysical Chemistry

Rice University

Bachelor in Arts

Certified Tutor

Natasha

Bachelor of Science, Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering
Natasha's other Tutor Subjects
AP Calculus AB
Pre-Algebra
Finite Mathematics
College Algebra

Thermodynamics, quantum mechanics, kinetics — physical chemistry is where math and chemistry collide, and most students need a tutor comfortable in both languages. Natasha's chemical engineering degree gave her deep fluency with partition functions, phase diagrams, and rate laws, and her MIT graduat...

Education

Johns Hopkins University

Bachelor of Science, Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering

Test Scores
SAT
1500

Certified Tutor

Mark

Bachelor of Science in Chemical Engineering
Mark's other Tutor Subjects
Pre-Algebra
College Algebra
Calculus
Algebra

Thermodynamic potentials, quantum mechanical models, kinetic rate laws — physical chemistry demands comfort with both rigorous math and chemical intuition simultaneously. Mark's chemical engineering degree from Yale required multiple semesters of p-chem coursework, and he tackles the subject by grou...

Education

Yale University

Bachelor of Science in Chemical Engineering

Test Scores
ACT
35

Certified Tutor

Krishna

Bachelor of Science
Krishna's other Tutor Subjects
College Algebra
Arithmetic
Trigonometry
Middle School Math

Biology research through the American Museum of Natural History and pre-med coursework at Cornell gave Krishna hands-on exposure to the thermodynamic and kinetic principles that p-chem formalizes — energy changes in biological systems, reaction rates, equilibrium behavior. She uses that life-science...

Education

Cornell University

Bachelor of Science

Test Scores
SAT
1560

Certified Tutor

Asad

Bachelor's degree in Chemistry
Asad's other Tutor Subjects
Calculus
Algebra
AP Biology
Honors Chemistry

Rice's chemistry curriculum put Asad through the full p-chem gauntlet — thermodynamics, quantum mechanics, kinetics — and his path to medical school at UT Houston means he's had to internalize concepts like enthalpy, entropy, and equilibrium well enough to apply them in biological and clinical conte...

Education

Rice University

Bachelor's degree in Chemistry

Certified Tutor

14+ years

Garrett

Bachelor in Arts
Garrett's other Tutor Subjects
Calculus
Algebra
Physiology
Physics

Garrett's biology degree means he already thinks in terms of systems — enzyme kinetics, membrane potentials, metabolic energy flow — which gives him a concrete anchor for the abstract math that makes p-chem so intimidating. He teaches thermodynamic and kinetic concepts by connecting derivations to t...

Education

University of Pennsylvania

Bachelor in Arts

Test Scores
SAT
1530

Certified Tutor

6+ years

Uma

Bachelor in Arts, Sports Medicine
Uma's other Tutor Subjects
Pre-Algebra
College Algebra
Middle School Math
Geometry

I am most passionate about biology and chemistry. I am a firm proponent of education, believing it to be absolutely necessary for an improved quality of life, and I try to impart this appreciation to all of my students.

Education

Rice University

Bachelor in Arts, Sports Medicine

Test Scores
ACT
35

Certified Tutor

5+ years

Sugi

Bachelor's degree in Cognitive Science and Biochemistry & Cell Biology
Sugi's other Tutor Subjects
Pre-Algebra
College Algebra
Middle School Math
Geometry

Studying biochemistry and cell biology at Rice means Sugi already had to internalize the thermodynamic and kinetic principles that drive cellular processes — free energy calculations for metabolic reactions, equilibrium constants governing binding events — before tackling them in their pure mathemat...

Education

Rice University

Bachelor's degree in Cognitive Science and Biochemistry & Cell Biology

Baylor College of Medicine

Doctor of Medicine, Ophthalmic Technology

Test Scores
Perfect Score
ACT
36

Certified Tutor

5+ years

Alec

Bachelor of Science
Alec's other Tutor Subjects
Calculus
Algebra
Physics
Physical Chemistry

Cornell's biological sciences curriculum put Alec through rigorous quantitative coursework, but it was his TA experience in general chemistry — running problem-solving sessions where students had to wrestle with energy, equilibrium, and rate laws — that sharpened his instinct for where p-chem concep...

Education

Cornell University

Bachelor of Science

Test Scores
ACT
35

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Asad

Calculus Tutor • +30 Subjects

Rice's chemistry curriculum put Asad through the full p-chem gauntlet — thermodynamics, quantum mechanics, kinetics — and his path to medical school at UT Houston means he's had to internalize concepts like enthalpy, entropy, and equilibrium well enough to apply them in biological and clinical contexts. That dual pressure of rigorous chemistry coursework and MCAT preparation sharpened his ability to explain why a derivation works, not just how to grind through the math.

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Garrett

Calculus Tutor • +30 Subjects

Garrett's biology degree means he already thinks in terms of systems — enzyme kinetics, membrane potentials, metabolic energy flow — which gives him a concrete anchor for the abstract math that makes p-chem so intimidating. He teaches thermodynamic and kinetic concepts by connecting derivations to the biological and chemical phenomena they describe, so something like a Gibbs free energy calculation feels like a tool rather than an exercise in symbol-pushing.

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Uma

Pre-Algebra Tutor • +64 Subjects

I am most passionate about biology and chemistry. I am a firm proponent of education, believing it to be absolutely necessary for an improved quality of life, and I try to impart this appreciation to all of my students.

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Sugi

Pre-Algebra Tutor • +54 Subjects

Studying biochemistry and cell biology at Rice means Sugi already had to internalize the thermodynamic and kinetic principles that drive cellular processes — free energy calculations for metabolic reactions, equilibrium constants governing binding events — before tackling them in their pure mathematical form. She unpacks p-chem derivations by linking each variable back to the molecular behavior it quantifies, turning something like a chemical potential expression into a description of what molecules are actually doing at a phase boundary. Rated 5.0 by students.

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Alec

Calculus Tutor • +28 Subjects

Cornell's biological sciences curriculum put Alec through rigorous quantitative coursework, but it was his TA experience in general chemistry — running problem-solving sessions where students had to wrestle with energy, equilibrium, and rate laws — that sharpened his instinct for where p-chem concepts start to blur. He teaches the subject by slowing down at the exact calculus step where the physical meaning tends to disappear, whether that's setting up a thermodynamic cycle or interpreting what a rate constant actually tells you about molecular collisions. Rated 4.8 by students.

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Kathleen

Calculus Tutor • +30 Subjects

Teaching high school chemistry daily means Kathleen regularly translates thermodynamic concepts like enthalpy, entropy, and equilibrium into language that clicks — a skill that carries directly into the more calculus-heavy treatment those same ideas get in a p-chem course. Her M.S.Ed from Penn and chemistry degree give her both the content depth and the instinct for spotting exactly where a derivation stops making sense to a student. Rated 5.0 by students.

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Abrahim

Middle School Math Tutor • +81 Subjects

Medical school at the Medical College of Wisconsin means Abrahim encounters p-chem's core concepts daily — reaction kinetics in pharmacology, thermodynamic energy balances in physiology, and the quantum mechanical principles behind spectroscopic diagnostics. His UCLA biology degree and 34 ACT demonstrate the mathematical fluency needed to work through derivations involving state functions, equilibrium constants, and entropy calculations without losing sight of what the chemistry actually describes. Rated 5.0 by students.

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Rahul

Pre-Algebra Tutor • +34 Subjects

Cornell's chemical engineering curriculum puts you through p-chem at an intense pace — Rahul graduated magna cum laude, which means he didn't just survive thermodynamics, quantum mechanics, and kinetics but internalized the reasoning behind each derivation. He pushes past rote symbol manipulation to make sure students can articulate why a particular state function applies or what a phase boundary physically represents. Rated 4.9 by students.

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Alex

Calculus Tutor • +23 Subjects

A bio-organic chemistry degree means Alex spent serious time with thermodynamic cycles, kinetics derivations, and the quantum mechanical underpinnings of molecular behavior — the core of any p-chem course. He approaches the subject by tying each derivation back to the organic and biochemical systems students already recognize, so an intimidating equation like the Arrhenius expression becomes a story about why reactions speed up at the molecular level.

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Abismael

AP Calculus AB Tutor • +30 Subjects

Thermodynamic state functions, quantum mechanical models, and kinetic rate laws all converge in Physical Chemistry, and most students need someone who can bridge the math and the chemistry simultaneously. Abismael's chemical engineering training put him through the full gauntlet — partial differential equations applied to heat transfer, Gibbs free energy calculations for phase equilibria, statistical mechanics. He explains each derivation from multiple angles and tests understanding with problems designed to be harder than what shows up on the exam.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Physical Chemistry sits at the intersection of chemistry and physics, requiring students to master abstract concepts like thermodynamics, quantum mechanics, and kinetics while also handling rigorous mathematical problem-solving. Many students struggle with visualizing molecular-level phenomena and connecting equations to real chemical behavior. The combination of conceptual difficulty, mathematical intensity, and the need to apply multiple problem-solving approaches makes it one of the most demanding chemistry courses.

A strong Physical Chemistry tutor breaks down abstract concepts like entropy, enthalpy, and reaction rates by connecting them to observable phenomena and real-world examples. Rather than simply memorizing formulas, tutors help you understand why equations work the way they do, how to set up problems strategically, and how to recognize which principles apply to different scenarios. This deeper understanding makes it easier to tackle unfamiliar problems on exams and in labs.

Unit conversions and dimensional analysis are critical tools in Physical Chemistry, but many students rush through them or treat them as busywork. The key is learning to use dimensional analysis as a problem-solving strategy—it helps you set up complex calculations correctly and catch errors before they snowball. A tutor can help you develop systematic approaches to these conversions, practice with varied problem types, and build confidence so you can use dimensional analysis as a safety check rather than a source of anxiety.

Physical Chemistry labs give you hands-on experience with the abstract concepts you're studying—measuring reaction rates, observing phase changes, or collecting calorimetry data makes thermodynamic principles tangible. A tutor can help you understand the purpose of each experiment, predict expected outcomes based on theory, interpret your results critically, and write clear lab reports that demonstrate both technical skills and conceptual understanding. This bridges the gap between equations and real chemistry.

Most Physical Chemistry courses require significant out-of-class time—typically 10-15 hours per week for solid understanding, including problem sets, lab preparation, and review. The depth of material and problem-solving demands mean that passive reading isn't enough; you need active practice with diverse problem types and frequent review of concepts. Working with a tutor can make this time more efficient by helping you focus on high-impact activities, identify gaps quickly, and develop effective study strategies tailored to how you learn best.

An effective Physical Chemistry tutor combines deep subject knowledge with strong teaching ability—they should be able to explain why concepts matter, break complex ideas into manageable pieces, and guide you through problem-solving without just giving you answers. Look for someone who can help you visualize abstract phenomena (using analogies, diagrams, or simulations), diagnose the root of your confusion, and adapt explanations to your learning style. The best tutors also help you build test-taking strategies and scientific reasoning skills, not just memorize formulas.

Yes—tutoring is particularly valuable for targeted exam preparation. A tutor can identify which concepts are holding you back (perhaps quantum mechanics or statistical mechanics), explain them from a different angle than your textbook or professor, and give you targeted practice with exam-style problems. Working through past exams together also reveals patterns in question types and helps you develop strategies for approaching unfamiliar problems under time pressure, which is where many students falter in Physical Chemistry.

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