GCSE Chemistry – Chromatography: Chromatograms & Calculating Rf Values

Don’t just watch...test yourself with quizzes, flashcards and exam questions. Start your free 7-day trial at KayScience.com GCSE Chemistry - Chromatograms & Calculating Rf Values (Chromatography) This GCSE Chemistry video explains chromatograms and how to calculate Rf values in chromatography clearly and step by step for exam success. In this video, GCSE students learn how chromatography is used to separate mixtures and how to analyse chromatograms by calculating Rf values in GCSE Chemistry. The lesson explains how to measure distances on a chromatogram, apply the Rf equation, and interpret results, with worked examples to support exam-style questions. This video is designed for GCSE Chemistry revision and supports students studying AQA GCSE Chemistry, OCR GCSE Chemistry, and Edexcel GCSE Chemistry. It is suitable for Year 9, Year 10, and Year 11 students and covers a key part of the separation techniques topic. Students will develop understanding of chromatography, chromatograms, calculating Rf values, using the Rf formula, identifying substances, and interpreting experimental data. These skills are commonly tested in GCSE Chemistry exams across all major exam boards. GCSE Chemistry keywords related to this video include chromatography GCSE Chemistry, chromatograms GCSE, calculating Rf values GCSE, Rf equation chromatography, separation techniques GCSE, GCSE Chemistry chromatography, AQA GCSE Chemistry chromatography, OCR GCSE Chemistry Rf values, and Edexcel GCSE Chemistry chromatography. This video directly supports the GCSE Chemistry specifications for AQA, OCR, and Edexcel and helps students prepare for exam questions on chromatography and Rf value calculations. Subscribe for more GCSE Chemistry revision videos explained clearly and simply. GCSE Chemistry exam topic: separation techniques. Supports AQA, OCR, and Edexcel GCSE Chemistry revision on chromatography, Rf values, and analysing substances. Related topics include mixtures, purity, filtration, and distillation.