Most marks lost in chemistry exams are not lost because students don't understand the chemistry — they are lost because of calculation errors that repeat themselves paper after paper. Every error here is avoidable once you know what to look for.
Chemistry calculations sit at the intersection of conceptual understanding and procedural accuracy. A student can know exactly what is happening chemically — which species react, why the equilibrium lies where it does, what the mechanism is — and still drop significant marks because of a unit they forgot to convert, a mole ratio they misread, or a rounding decision they made too early. These errors are not failures of understanding. They are failures of habit.
The ten errors below account for the overwhelming majority of calculation marks lost across O Level and A Level chemistry papers. Each one is presented with a worked example of how it goes wrong, followed by the corrected version and the habit that prevents it.
The most common unit trap in chemistry calculations is the cm³ → dm³ conversion. Volume data is typically given in cm³ in exam questions; the concentration formula requires dm³. Forgetting this single step produces an answer that is off by a factor of 1000 — enough to score zero on an otherwise correct solution.
The full hierarchy of unit traps: cm³ ↔ dm³ ↔ m³ for volume; g ↔ kg ↔ mg for mass; kPa ↔ Pa for pressure (ideal gas law); °C ↔ K for temperature (also ideal gas law). Each boundary is a potential error.
Habit fix: Write a conversion line as the very first step of every calculation involving volume — before touching any formula. Make it automatic: "V = ___ cm³ ÷ 1000 = ___ dm³." It takes three seconds and eliminates a mark-costing error entirely.
There are three core mole relationships, and confusing which to apply — or substituting values into the wrong one — is a recurring error. The formulas themselves are simple; the skill is recognising which one the question's data maps onto.
Habit fix: Before writing any formula, list what the question gives you: mass? concentration? volume of gas? temperature and pressure? The data tells you which formula to use. Never pick a formula and then go looking for data to fill it.
Every stoichiometry calculation involves a mole ratio. The ratio comes from the balanced chemical equation — the coefficients tell you how many moles of each species react or are produced relative to every other species. Assuming a 1:1 ratio when the actual ratio is 1:2 (or 2:1) halves or doubles your answer and typically scores zero on the stoichiometry step.
Habit fix: Never proceed to step 2 of a calculation without writing the fully balanced equation at step 1 — even if you think you know the ratio. Highlight the coefficients of the two species you are relating. The mole ratio is those two coefficients, nothing else.
Rounding an intermediate value to 2 significant figures before the final step introduces rounding error that compounds with each subsequent step. In multi-step calculations, an error of 0.01 in step 2 can translate into a discrepancy of 0.05 or more by step 5 — enough to shift the answer to a different significant figure and cost a mark.
Habit fix: Keep every digit on your calculator or in your working until the very last line. Write "round at end only" at the top of any multi-step calculation as a visual reminder. Final answer should match the significant figures of the least precise data given.
Concentration in chemistry is expressed in mol dm⁻³ (molarity). The dm³ in the denominator means volume must be in dm³ when substituting into C = n ÷ V. Using volume in cm³ directly — without converting — produces an answer 1000 times too large. This is related to Error 1 but manifests specifically in concentration calculations, including titrations and dilution problems.
Chemistry calculation questions routinely ask for something other than the most obvious quantity. Common traps: asking for the mass of the excess reagent remaining (not the product formed); asking for the volume of gas at a non-standard temperature; asking for the concentration after dilution (not before). Students who dive straight into calculation without identifying the exact target consistently solve for the wrong thing.
Habit fix: Before writing anything, underline or circle the exact quantity the question asks for. Write it at the top of your working: "Target: volume of H₂ in cm³." Check that your final answer answers exactly this — not a related but different quantity.
Titration calculations combine every error type in one question: unit conversion, mole formula selection, mole ratios, and concentration calculation — all in sequence. Three specific titration errors recur most often: using a single rough titre in the average (instead of concordant titres), ignoring the mole ratio between acid and alkali, and forgetting to identify which species is in the burette vs the flask.
Chemistry mark schemes award marks at each step — not just for the final numerical answer. A calculation that is entirely correct except for an arithmetic slip in the final step will score full method marks (typically 2 out of 3) if all working is shown. The same calculation with no working shown scores zero, even if the final answer happens to be correct. This is a systemic failure: students who work on calculators and transcribe only the answer are gambling every calculation mark on perfect arithmetic.
Habit fix: Write every line of your working on the answer paper — formula, substitution with units, intermediate result, final answer. Add the units at each step. This takes 15 extra seconds and can be worth 2 additional marks if your arithmetic slips. It is the highest-return habit in exam calculations.
Two related but distinct quantities are frequently confused: percentage yield (how much of the theoretical maximum was actually obtained in a specific experiment) and atom economy (how efficiently a reaction uses the atoms of its reactants in the desired product — a property of the reaction equation, not the experiment). Applying the percentage yield formula to an atom economy question, or vice versa, scores zero.
Habit fix: Ask yourself: "Does this need experimental data (actual vs theoretical yield) or just the equation?" If only the equation is given, it is almost certainly atom economy. If the question mentions how much product was actually isolated, it is percentage yield.
The previous nine errors are not really ten separate problems — they are symptoms of one root cause: insufficient deliberate practice with exam-style calculation questions. The students who consistently make unit conversion errors are the students who have not done enough calculations to have the conversion become automatic. The students who skip balanced equations are the students for whom stoichiometry has not become habitual.
Practice must be deliberate to be effective. Doing ten questions and checking only the final answer tells you almost nothing. Doing five questions, showing all working, checking every step against the mark scheme, and identifying the precise step where any error occurred — this is how calculation skills improve.
After every past paper attempt, note every calculation mark dropped and which error type caused it. After three papers, a pattern emerges — and that pattern tells you exactly which error type to practise most deliberately.
Students instinctively move on to new questions after getting something wrong. But redoing the same question type until it is error-free is far more efficient. Identify the error, understand why it happened, and repeat that question type until the correct approach is automatic.
Speed matters in exams. Students who calculate correctly but too slowly run out of time — and a blank answer scores the same as a wrong one. Once you can do a calculation correctly, begin timing yourself. The target: one mark per minute across the paper.
Each question below shows a student's working. Identify which error from the list of 10 caused the mistake — and why. Eight scenarios, one mark each.
Use this to verify your working in any mole calculation. Select the formula, enter your values, and check your answer — units handled automatically.
Calculation errors are habits. They persist because they are never caught at the exact moment they are made — a student who submits a wrong answer receives a mark scheme, but not an explanation of the precise step where their reasoning diverged from the correct approach. A tutor watching the working in real time catches errors at the moment they occur, before they solidify into habit.
After reviewing several past paper attempts, a tutor can identify which of the ten error types a student makes consistently — and prioritise exactly those in subsequent sessions. This is more efficient than drilling all calculation types equally.
In a shared-whiteboard session, the tutor sees every line of working as it is written. An incorrect unit conversion is caught at line 1 — not discovered when the final answer is wrong. This immediate feedback loop is the fastest way to break a persistent error habit.
Once the tutor knows which error types a student is prone to, sessions can be structured around questions that specifically exercise those skills — rather than general revision that may not expose the habitual error at all.
Book a free diagnostic session with Dr Fahad Rafiq. Bring a recent past paper attempt and we'll identify exactly which calculation errors are costing you marks — and fix them before the exam.
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