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Open Test Solutions

The document provides a summary of answers, hints and solutions to physics and chemistry questions from an ALL INDIA TEST SERIES open test for JEE (Main)-2024 with a test date of 14-01-2024. It includes the questions, solutions and explanations for 30 physics questions in Section A and B, and 4 chemistry questions in Section A. The document serves as a resource for students preparing for the JEE (Main) exam to review questions from a past test, along with the corresponding solutions and explanations provided by experts.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
25 views

Open Test Solutions

The document provides a summary of answers, hints and solutions to physics and chemistry questions from an ALL INDIA TEST SERIES open test for JEE (Main)-2024 with a test date of 14-01-2024. It includes the questions, solutions and explanations for 30 physics questions in Section A and B, and 4 chemistry questions in Section A. The document serves as a resource for students preparing for the JEE (Main) exam to review questions from a past test, along with the corresponding solutions and explanations provided by experts.

Uploaded by

muheebkareem3784
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 18

ALL INDIA TEST SERIES

OPEN TEST

JEE (Main)-2024
TEST DATE: 14-01-2024

ANSWERS, HINTS & SOLUTIONS


Physics PART – A

SECTION – A

1. C
Sol. Conservation of mechanical enrgy with respect to point P
1 1
(4)(2  1)2  (100)( )2
2 2
where  is maximum elongation in the spring
So,  = 6 cm
(100)(6) 2
So, maximum accelertion =  150 m/s
4

2. C
Sol. The block will start slipping when
8
0.3  20  t  t = 3 sec
4
From impulse momentum theorem
1
(8  6)  8  0.25  20  2
v 2  2.5 m/s
2

3. D
5  3 
Sol. U  (1)  R  T  (1)  R  T  4RT
2  2 
v r /m 2

v r /H 3
v s/m 6

v s/He 5
v r /He 2 1
 
v r /H 4 2

4. C
Sol. At steady state charges on each surfaces are A B C
2Q(2d) 4Qd
So, VC  VA  
0 A 0 A
+2Q Q
+Q 0
0 2Q

5. B    
Sol. For equilibrium
 
E  Bv
   E
So, E  B  (B  v)  B
  2
 EB  B v 
v

B

6. A
2
 v 
Sol. vimage/lens    v object/lens
u
1 1 1
   v = + 60 cm
v 20 30
 ˆ  2iˆ  14iˆ m/s
v image/lens  (2)2 (4i)

î unit vector is towards right

7. D
Sol. There is no charge in wavelengh of characteristic spectrum due to change in energy of the
incident electrons. K wavelength is large as ampared to K wavelength.

8. B
 2  
Sol. a x , so   rad/s
64 8

A  4 2 (because the particle is having time period of 16 sec)
8
32 2
So, A  m

9. D
10  0.7
Sol. i  7.75 mA
1.2
10. B
Sol. Due to temperature increment all d1, d2 and r increases.
11. C
Sol. W AB = W CD = 0
WBC  nR(500  350)  150nR
WDA  nR(300  400)  100nR
3
Q AB  n R(350  300)  75nR
2
5
QBC  n R(150)  375nR
2
3
QCD  n R( 100)  150nR
2
5
QDA  n R(100)  250nR
2
Wnet 50nR 1
So,     
Qinput 450nR 9

12. D
 V ˆ V ˆ V ˆ
Sol. E i j k
x y z
 2k(xiˆ  yjˆ  zk)
ˆ

 qE
a
m
2k 3q
So, a 
m

13. B
(6.7)(4)
Sol. Q  6.7   6.825MeV
214

14. C
Sol. It activates due to electron hole pair formation after radiation is incident on depletion region.

15. B
1  2
Sol. I  I0 cos2 t
2
2(n1  n2 )t 1 I
 I0 cos2  I0 cos2 (4)  0
2 16 2

16. D
GMm  R2  1 2
Sol.   3    mv e  0
2R  4R2  2
GM  11  1 2
  ve  0
2R  4  2
11GM
ve 
4R
17. B
Sol. The circuit is in resonance
So rms potential difference across resistance is 220 V
220
So, I   2.2 A
100

18. C
Sol. Yellow  4
Violet  7
Brown  multiple 10
Gold  Tolerance 5%

19. D
R2 d
Sol. mgR  R (B0 t 2 ) at t = 2 sec
2R dt
2B0RQ
So,  
mg

20. C
Sol. FP  6r(3v 0  v0 ) towards the downward direction
So, P  (12rv 0 )(v 0 )  12rv 02

SECTION – B

21. 45
 1 2
Sol. I  (80)   (cos 30)2 (cos 30)2  22.50 W/m
2

22. 25
Sol. from work energy theorem
W E = K f  Ki
1 25m
qEa = m  42  32  
2   2
25m 25
a 
2qE 2  2  102  100
a = 6.25

23. 15
gx 2
Sol. y  x tan  
2u cos 2 
2

(10)x2
y  x tan30 
3
(2)(10)2
4
x 2 2
y  x
3 30
A 15
So,  5 3
B 3
24. 3113
Sol. Total surface area = 6(7.203)2  311.299  311.3 m2

25. 1
Sol. For anguarl impulse theorem
t  I  0
(2)(60)(2) 
  N-m
(40)  (60) 10
2
  = =1
10
26. 30
Sol. (1)(6) = (4 + 1 + 1)v, at the maximum height
So, v = 1 m/s
Where v is velcoity of the system along the horizotnal
For conservation of mechanical energy
1 1
(2)(3)2  (6)(1)2  (2)(g)(h)
2 2
93
h  0.3m = 30 cm
2g

27. 500
2
4R2S TS4  Rs 
Sol. S  TS4  
4d2  d 
2
8
 7  108 
2600  5.67  10 TS4  
11 
 1.1 10 
2600  1022  1.21
TS4  16 8
 0.113  1016
49  10  5.67  10
TS  5800 K
2.9  10 3
So, mp   500 nm
5800
28. 1125
Sol. In steady state 3 = 3V
So, P.D. across the capacitor = 15V
1
So, U0  (5)(15)2 J  562.50 J 3
2 3 5
2

1A 3A 2 = 24V

C = 5F

29. 1480
4

i 8e 4
Sol. Displaced current =   1.48 A = 1480 mA
2 2
30. 502
 1500  7.5  1500  5 
Sol.     500  501.67 Hz
 1500  5  1500  7.5 
Chemistry PART – B

SECTION – A

31. B
Sol. Cl  strong (– I), SO3  weak (– I)
+I : O   COO  CH3

32. A
Sol. No chiral centre is present. POS is absent and so the molecule is chiral.

33. D
Sol. NH3 is more basic than H2O. NH3 ionises as NH4 and NH2 .

34. C
Sol. CH2
NaNH2

Path 1

O
O O

Path  2 NaNH2 Br
Br

Br

O O

NaNH2

O
O
Br
II 
Br

Br
O

NaNH2

O
 I
35. D
Sol.

H3C N C S Bent

H3Si N C S Linear
36. B
Sol.

CH3 H

POS exist

H CH3

37. C
Sol. C – H bond is directly involved in dissociation to form enol for additon of Br 

38. A
Sol. Factual

39. D
Sol. H3C
C O I2
H3C  Vacant 
 
 filled e    orbital 

Charge transfer
I2 on dissociation converts to I

and then the colour starts fading out.

40. C
r r
 
na0 3a0
Sol. e e  n  3

r  r   2 2

 3d orbital.

41. C
Sol.

N N Sb
F F H H Cl Cl
F H Cl
102.3o 107o Close to 90o

42. B
Sol. Bond strength of D2 > H2.
43. B
Sol. Cl Cl
O O O O
KNH2

 NH3

NH NH
K

O
O KNH2
NH3
KCl
O
N O
H NH
O

NH3

Tautomerises
 OH
N
H

44. B
Sol. Compound 1 : concentration = C1; number of phosphate = C
Compound 2 : concentration = C2; number of phosphate = 2C.
Total phosphate = 36 m moles in 1 L
4C1  C2  36 m moles or 4C  2C  36 m moles
C = 6 m moles
 C1   compound 1  24 mM
C2   compound 2  6 mM

45. D
Sol. Bouveault-Blanc reduction is used to reduce esters to alcohols.

46. B
Sol. The technique is used to separate liquids that are miscible and differ slightly in boiling point.

47. C
Sol. CHO COOH

HO H HO H CHO

HO H HO H HO H
Br2 /H2 O 3
  Fe ,H2 O2

H OH H OH H OH

H OH H OH H OH

CH2OH CH2OH CH2OH


CHO COOH

H OH H OH CHO

HO H HO H HO H
Br2 /H2 O 3
  Fe ,H2 O2

H OH H OH H OH

H OH H OH H OH

CH2OH CH2OH CH2OH


D-glucose

48. C
Sol. O O
O
OEt
H Br
NaOEt EtO

NaBr  

O
EtOH EtOH
C OEt O

C OEt

49. A
Sol. Salt bridge allows flow of ions.

50. B
Sol. Solid HF has zig-zag chains of HF molecules.
Intermolecular distance = 155 pm.

SECTION – B

51. 4
Sol.
PMe3 PMe3
H PMe3 Me3P H
Rh Rh
PMe3 Me3P C CR
RC C
C CR C CR

All cis
(1) (2)
C CR H
Me3P H Me3P PMe3
Rh Rh
PMe3 Me3P C CR
Me3P
C CR C CR

(Inactive) (Inactive)
(3) (4)

52. 8
Sol. N C C N N C S S C N
x=2 y=6

53. 168
  dEo  
Sol. Ho  nF E o  T  
  dT  
 2  96500 0.675  300   6.5  10 4  
 167.910 k J
54. 7
Sol. nCO2  6 nH2 O  4 nN2  1
Formula  C6H8N2
55. 6
Sol. pK a1  2.40 pK a2  9.60
1
pH 
2
pK a1  pK a2 
56. 28
Sol. UABC  UAB  UBC   UAC 
UAC  UAB  UBC
Now; UAB  qAB  w AB  600 J  O
UBC  qBC  w BC  200   PV 
 N 
 200   8  104 2 3  103 m3 
 m 
 
 200   240 J
 40 J
 UAC  600  40  560 J  x
x
  28
20
57. 50
Sol. O O O
 1. NaOEt
 
Ph H Ph CH3 2.  Ph Ph
MW  120 MW  208
MW  106
10.6
nPhCHO   0.1
106
1 mole of PhCHO 1 mole product
Wexp ected
nProduct produced  0.1 
208
Wexp ected  20.8 g
 10.4 
%yield     100  50%
 20.8 

58. 25
Sol. CH3
H2 O
2CH3MgBr  H3C C OC2H5   H3C C CH3

O OH
10 mL  0.025  0.25 mmole  nCH3 COC2H5
nMeMgBr  0.5 mmole  M  V
0.5 mmole
V  2.5 mL
0.2 M
x  2.5mL
10x = 25

59. 4
dP k1k 2 Eo  S 
Sol.   k 2 Eo   0.02
dt k1  S 
k 2  Eo  k1k 2 Eo S 
 
2 k  1  k1  S 
 k 1  k1 S   2k1 S 
 k 1  k1  S
k1 1 1
   4000
k 1 S  
250  10 kg / dm3
6

60. 5
Sol. Let the concentration of FeSO4 and K2S be xM and the volume is V L
FeSO 4  K 2 S  FeS  K 2 SO 4
xV xV  
  xV xV
K sp  Fe 2  S 2 
2
xV 
6.3  10 18   
 2V 
x  5.02  109
 C  5.02
Mathematics PART – C

SECTION – A

61. B
2x 2  kx  5
Sol. lim 2
x  x 2  3x  4

so, there must be some k s.t.


2x 2  kx  5
 2  k  6
x 2  3x  4

62. A
Sol. Let  < , f(x) = cot1x
cot 1   cot 1  1  
Using L.M.V.T   = (c2 + 1)
  1 c2 cot 1   cot 1 
2
2 c 3 2<c <3
 3 < c2 + 1 < 4
4 <  (c2 + 1) < 3

63. C
Sol. As {a}   1
a
1
 1  {a3 }   3   1
a 
1
x
So,  1 x 1  x2 dx
0
Let x = sin, dx = cos.d
sin  1  sin2  
 /2  /2
sin   cos2  d
 1  sin    1 sin  d
0 0
 /2

 sin  1  sin   d  1  4
0

64. B
Sol. a(sinx + 2sinx.cosx) = 3sinx  4sin3x
2
= sinx(3  4sin x)
= sinx(3  4(1  cos2x))
a(sinx + 2sinx.cosx) = sinx(4cos2x  1)
As sinx  0, in (0, )
 a(1 + 2cosx) = 4cos2x  1
 4cos2x  2acosx  (1 + a) = 0
a  (a  2) 1 a 1
 cosx =  cos x   and
4 2 2
1
Since cosx = 
2
2
x=
3
a1 a 1
for cosx =  1  1 a  (3, 1)
2 2
a1 1
if   a = 2
2 2
this will repeat one solution so a  (3, 1) {2}
65. B
Sol. z2  cz + 10 = 0
and z1, z2 are roots and c is real so z2 = z1
2
We have z1z2 = 10,  z1z1  10  z1  10
So, z1  10
and z1 + z2 = c
z1  z1  c
c c2 z1
2Re(z1) = c  Re(z1) =, Im  z1   10  1
2 4 z2
1 1 10 z
1 1 2 z z z
Now      2  1
z1 10 z1 10 z1 10 10
1 z
 1
z 2 10 1
1  1  z1
Now area of quadrational = Re  z1  2 Im z1 1 2  z 2  z1
2  10 
1 c2  1 
= c 10  1  
2 4  102 
1
1 2  2 
10  c 40  c   is maximum
2

2  4 
if c2 = 40  c2
c2 = 20  c = 2 5
66. C
2  sin2 x   2  2 1  tan2 x 
Sol. 
1  tan2 x 1  tan2 x
  cos x = sin x + 2  2
2 2 2

2 2
 sin2x = 2
 0  1  2  1
1  1  2
67. A
Sol. Let polynomial is P(x) and two integer roots are , 
 P(x) = (x  ) (x  ) (x2 + ax + b) for some integer a, b if p + iq is a root of P(x), then p  iq is
also a root (with q  0).
 x2 + ax + b = (x  (p + iq)) (x  (p  iq)) = x2  2px + p2 + q2
Product of the roots is p2 + q2 sum 2p
a = 2p, b = p2 + q2
1  i 11 1  i 11
from option , is only roots.
2 2
68. C
2 2
Sol. Given circle x + y  6x  4y + 11 = 0 (centre (3, 2) r = 2 tangent at (2, 3) will
2x + 3y  3(x + 2)  2(y + 3) + 11 = 0
x + y  1 = 0  x  y + 1 = 0
 1 1 
Coordinate of A  3  4 ,2  4    3  2 2, 2  2 2 
 2 2
Reflection of A with respect to line is C1
x  3  2 2  y   2  2 2  2 A
  2    2
1 1 2
x  2  3  2 2  1  2 2
(3, 2)
y  42 2 B
B 1  2 2,4  2 2  (2, 3)
Area of ABCD
1
= 2  2 2  4  2 2 2 = 6  4 2 
2 C D
3  2 2,0 
1  2 2,0 

69. D
Sol. The angle APB is obtuse if and only P lines
inside the circle with diameter AB (0, 4) E D (2 + 1, 4)
1
The area of AFB is =  2  4  4
2
Area of ABCDE = 4(2 + 1) 4 = 8
(0, 2) A
AB = 2 5 P
Radius of circle = 5
5
Area of circle inside ABCDE is
2 F B (4, 0) C (2 + 1, 0)
Probability is that APB is obtuse
5 5
= 
2  8 16

70. A
Sol.
B's . C's A's . C's A's . B's
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
k B's (5  k) C's (5  k) A's k C's k' A's (5  k) B's
If there are K B's in the 1st five letters, then there must be (5  k) is in the first five letter so there
must be K' C's and (5  K) A's in the next five letters and K A's and (5  K) B's in the last five
letter.
So the arrangement is
5
 5!  5! 5!
  k!(5  k)!   k!(5  k)!  k!(5  k)!
k 0  

71. C
n n
Sol.  n C j  jCi
i  0 j 1
n 1 1 n 2 2 2 n 3 3 3 3 n n n n
= C1( C0 + C1) + C2( C0 + C1 + C2) + C3( C0 + C1 + C2 + C3) …..+ Cn( C0 + C1 + …..+ Cn)
= 2nC1 + 22.nC2 + 23.nC3 + ….. + 2n.nCn
= (1 + 2)n  1 = 3n  1
72. C
Sol. Let P(x) = ax2 + bx + c reflect it over the x-axis we have ax2  bx  c
2 2
so f(x) = a(x + 5)  b(x  5)  c = ax + 10ax  bx  25a + 5b  c
f(x) + g(x) = 20ax + 10b since a  0

73. B
Sol. So locus of P is a circle with diameter AB = 2 P
1
Radius = 90°
2

A z1 B z2

74. B
9/10
 3 2 3
Sol. I=   2x  3x  x   dx
1/10
 2
9/10
  3 2 3
I=   2 1  x   3 1  x   1  x    dx
1/10
 2
9/10
4 2
 2I =  1dx  I=
1/10
5 5

75. A
Sol. Let 1  x3 = t
1 3 1 3 1
 1  t   1  t 
2 2
 3I1 = dt and 3I2 = dt
0 0
Applying integration by parts on 3I2
1 1
3 1 3
3I2 = 1  t 2   t 0   3  1  1  t 2    2t 2 1
 tdt
0
1 3
 3I2 =   3  1 2  1  t 2  1  t 2
 1 dt
0

 3I2 =   3  1 2  3I2   3  1 2  3I1


 I2 = 1   3  1 2   3  1 2 I1
I1 1   3  1 2 1
   1
I2  3  1 2  3  1 2
76. B
x
t10  1
Sol. Let f(x) =  t10  t 4  1 dt  6x  5
0
f(0) = 5 and f(1) is negative
x10  1 x4
f'(x) = 10  6   5 
x  x4  1 x10  x 4  1
 f'(x) is always negative  only 1 solution.
77. A
f x f y
Sol. f(x + y) =
f x   f y
1
 f(x + y) =
1 1


f x  f  y
1 1 1
  
f x  y f x  f y 
1
Let  g x 
f x

 g(x + y) = g(x) + g(y)  x, y  R
 g(x) = kx, where k is constant
1
  kx
f x

1
 f(x) = but f(1) = 32  k =
kx
32
 f(x) =
x
32
f(4) = 8
4

78. D
 5 
 sin x 
1  a4
Sol. This can be written as lim  5
x   5 
 4
x 
 1 a 
since a2 > 2
a4 > 4
a4 < 4
1  a4 < 3
|1  a4| > 3

79. D
x
Sol. g  x   2f    f  2  x 
2
x1
 g  x   2f     f   2  x   1
22
x
 g  x   f     f   2  x 
2
Given f"(x) < 0  x (0, 2)  f'(x) is decreasing in (0, 2)
x
Case I : If > 2  x and f'(x) is decreasing
2
x 4
f     f  2  x   x >
 2 3
4 
 g'(x) is decreasing in  ,2 
3 
x
Case II : If < 2  x and f'(x) is decreasing
2
x  4
 f     f   2  x   x   0, 
2  3
 4
g(x) increases in  0,  .
 3

80. B
 /4 5 / 4 2
Sol. Area bounded =  1  cos x  dx   1  sin x  dx   1  cos x  dx = 2  2 2
0 / 4 5  /4

SECTION – B

81. 2
Sol. f(x) = x  ax  b  co-domain is [0, )
Domain also x  0
b
f(x) = 0, x = 0, 
a
 b b2 
  , 
 2a 4a 

O b/a O b/a
b
so  >0a<0
a
b b2 b b
    
a 4a a 4a
a  4a  a2 = 4a
a2 + 4a = 0
a = 0, 4

82. 2
2 2 3
Sol. So radical axis will be concurrent 1 1 4  0
2 k 2
k=2

83. 5
Sol. Possible values are {2, 1, 0, 1, 2}

84. 2
45
Sol. Since, sum of all numbers is 1 + 2 + 3 + …… + 9 = 45, each groups sum will be = = 15
3
groups are (9, 1, 5) (8, 3, 4) (7, 2, 6) and (9, 2, 4) (8, 1, 6) (7, 3, 5).
85. 8
Sol. Let the common diff. between consecutive ai be 'd'
then a15 = a1 + 14d
a15  a1 = 14d
Since 1  a1  10, 241  a15  250
231  a15  a1  249  231  14d  249
and d must be an integer  d = 17
Now, 1  a1  10, 13  a2  20, 241  a1 + 238  250
1  a1  10, 13  a1 + 17  20,  4  a1  3, 3  a1  12
 a1 = 3
So, a14 = 3 + 13  17 = 224.

86. 5
2 2 3 3 5
Sol. Let the first 2 term is x and y, then the terms would be x, y, xy, xy , x y and x y
3 5 3 5
 x y = 4000 = 5 .2
 x = 5, y = 2.

87. 36
Sol. 1 + 7 + 5 + 2 + 5 = 20
So, there are 3 possible cases :
(1) if mean is 5  x = 5  6  20 = 10
(2) if mean is 7  x = 7  6  20 = 22
20  x
(3) if mean is x  x = x=4
6
So, answer = 10 + 22 + 4 = 36

88. 800
Sol. y2 + 2xy + x2 = 400  40|x| + x2
(x + y)2 = (20  |x|)2 (20, 20)
(0, 20)
x + y = |x|  20
or x + y = 20  |x|

(0, 20) (20, 20)

89. 841
Sol. All possible location of P are integral points such that |x| + |y|  20
i.e. 1 + 3 + 5 + 7 + …… + 41 + 39 + 37 + …….. + 1
= 202 + 212 = 292 = 841

90. 61
Sol. The current range = 28  3 = 25
To double the range that is = 50
Since we do not want to change the median, we need to get a value less than or equal to 8 for
the smaller, making 53 fixed for the larger, since anything less than 3 is not beneficial to the
optimization. So taking our optimal values of 8 and 53, we have an answer 8 + 53 = 61.

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