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This mock covers the foundational vocabulary and concepts a first-year MSc Forensic Science student must know about Forensic Chemistry as it appears in the FACT exam syllabus (Elective IV: Forensic Chemical Sciences — Forensic Chemistry I and II, with crossover into Instrumental Techniques). Thirty questions across alcoholic beverages and methanol toxicity, denaturants and the State Excise Acts, petroleum products and adulteration with kerosene (BIS IS 2796 / IS 1448 and ASTM D86 / D93), arson investigation (NFPA 921, ASTM E1412 / E1618), the trap-case phenolphthalein-on-alkali colour reaction, classification of explosives (primary vs secondary), IEDs and post-blast residue analysis, the NDPS Act 1985 (Sections 8, 22, 27, 50; small/intermediate/commercial quantity scheme), pharmacological classification of drugs (narcotics, depressants, stimulants, hallucinogens), instrumental drug analysis (TLC/HPTLC, GC-MS, FTIR — SWGDRUG categories), and pesticide chemistry (organochlorines, organophosphates, carbamates, pyrethroids, phosphides; extraction by QuEChERS). It is pitched at BSc and first-year MSc Forensic Science students at NFSU, LNJN-NICFS and other Indian universities, FACT and FACT Plus aspirants, and UGC-NET candidates who need the Forensic Chemistry foundations locked in before tackling the application-level papers on toxicology, instrumental techniques, and case studies. Forensic Chemistry is one of the most heavily examined sections of FACT, and the questions here target the definitions, statute sections, and bench techniques most reliably asked. Themes covered: - Ethanol vs methanol — chemistry, toxicity, FSL discrimination - Denatured spirit and the State Excise Acts - Petrol and diesel adulteration — BIS IS 2796, ASTM D86, kerosene as adulterant - Flash point (Pensky-Martens, ASTM D93) and distillation curve discrimination - Arson scene origin determination, debris collection, headspace GC-MS (ASTM E1412 / E1618) - Trap-case phenolphthalein chemistry — pink colour, alkali wash, TLC + UV-Vis recovery - Primary vs secondary (high) explosives; IED component anatomy; post-blast sampling - Explosive residue analysis — TLC/HPTLC, HPLC, GC-MS, LC-MS, FTIR, XRD - NDPS Act 1985 — Sections 8 (prohibition), 27 (consumption), 50 (search safeguard); small/commercial quantity scheme - Pharmacological classification — narcotics, depressants, stimulants, hallucinogens - Drug analysis — TLC/HPTLC + colour reagents (Marquis, Mecke, Mandelin), GC-MS, FTIR (SWGDRUG categories) - Pesticide groups (OC, OP, carbamate, pyrethroid, phosphide), formulations (EC, WP, SC, G, DP), QuEChERS extraction Each question carries a detailed 220+ word explanation citing standard references — Modi's Medical Jurisprudence and Toxicology, Saferstein's Criminalistics (12th edition), Sharma's Forensic Science in Criminal Investigation and Trials (5th edition), Vogel's Practical Organic Chemistry, BIS IS 2796 / IS 324 / IS 1448, ASTM D86 / D93 / E1412 / E1618, NFPA 921, the NDPS Act 1985 with its 2001 quantity-notification, the Insecticides Act 1968, and the SWGDRUG and UNODC monographs. Allow 15 minutes; the explanations are long enough to use as study notes by themselves. If you can pass this mock comfortably, you have the FACT Forensic Chemistry vocabulary that the application-level papers build on.