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Sec: XI_STU-IR_IIT Date:26-06-2023

Time: 3 Hrs. FTM – 1 Max.Marks:300


JEE MAIN 2022 Model
KEY SHEET
PHYSICS
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
D D A D B C B D B D
11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
A B A B D A B B A C
21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30
3 6 6 1 6 150 4 6 5 12
CHEMISTRY
31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40
B D C A D A B A B D
41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50
C A B B C C C A A A
51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
4 7 3 5 53 7 267 5 3 568
MATHEMATICS
61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70
C A A B A D A C B B
71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80
A B B B D D B A A C

81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90

7 4 0 1 19 2 12 32 4 3
XI_IIT_IR_FTM–1_26-06-2023
Solutions
1. (D) According to equation,
Rotation always changes the vector, because F1 1
of its direction changes.  or F2  2F1
F2 2
2. (D)
and R = 3F1
5kˆ  akˆ substituting these values in eqn (i), we get;
a=5 (3F1 )2  F12  (2F1 )2  4F12 cos 
3. (A)
or 4cos   4 or cos   1
As the magnitude of vector sum is given by
  cos1 (1)  0
| A  B | A  B  2ABcos 
2 2

6. (C)
Also | A  B | A  (B)  2A(B) cos 
2 2
According to the given condition,
As per question, A  ˆi  ˆj, B  ˆi  ˆj
A 2  B2  2AB c os  | A | (1) 2  (1) 2  2 and
 A 2  (B) 2  2A(B) cos  | B | (1) 2  ( 1) 2  2
Squaring both sides we get
Let  be angle between the vectors A and B .
A 2  B2  2AB cos   A 2  B2  2AB cos  Then according to definition of scalar product
(or dot product)

4AB cos  = 0, i.e.  =  90
2 A.B (iˆ  ˆj)
cos    0
4. (D) | A || B | ( 2)( 2)
The projection of vector A and B is given as   cos 1 (0)  90
1 1
(A.B)  7. (B)
|A| | i  3j  4k |
A and B are anti parallel for the given case.
(2i  3j  k).(i  3j  4k)
8. (D)
2  9  4 3
  For perpendicular vectors:
1  9  16 26
AB  0
5. (B)
 (2iˆ  3jˆ  4k)
ˆ  (iˆ  2jˆ  nk)
ˆ 0
Let F1 and F2 be the two forces acting on a
particle simultaneously and  be angle or 2 + 6 – 4n = 0
between then. or n = 2
9. (B)
As vector A is perpendicular to vector B and
to vector C, also B  C is perpendicular to
vector B and vector C. So vector A is parallel
to B  C .

The resultant of these two forces is,


R  F12  F22  2FF
1 2 cos  ....(i)

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XI_IIT_IR_FTM–1_26-06-2023
10. (D) 14. (B)
Suppose the angle between the two unit From given definition
vectors be . Then using :
A  2cos60iˆ  2sin 60jˆ
R = P + Q + 2PQ cos 
2 2 2
B  2cos(60)iˆ  2sin(60j) ˆ  2cos 60iˆ  2sin 60jˆ
Here | R || P || Q | 1 1
A  B  2  2 cos 60iˆ  0ˆj  4. ˆi  2iˆ
2
 (1)2  (1)2  (1)2  2(1)(1) cos 
ˆ B
|A ˆ | 2
 1  2  2cos 
15. (D)
1 2
cos       As magnitude of unit vector is 1
2 3
Now, the angle between two unit vectors  (0.5) 2  (0.8) 2  (C) 2  1
for the difference is :
0.25  0.64  c2  1
2 
 =   
3 3 0.89 + C2 = 1
Now using, R2 = P2 + Q2 + 2PQ cos  C2 = 1 – 0.89
 1 C2 = 0.11
 (1)  (1)  2(1)(1) cos  1  1  2   3
2 2

3 2 C= 0.11
 R 3 16. (A)
11. (A) Given R = A = B, it will give  120
A  A  A  2A - 17. (B)
Now as | A ||  A | ab 3
 or 3a  3b  a  b
ab 1
  | A | 0
Or 2a = 4b or a = 2b
12. (B)
18. (B)
Since the third vector has a component which
lies outside the plane of the remaining two, As A  B  0
hence this extra component can not be (3i  5j  5k)  (5i  j  4k)  15  5  20  0
cancelled by any other component during  
addition, so sum can never be zero. Also, the hence angle between A and B is 90°
sum lies outside the plane of A+B (which is  (B)
the same plane as A and B) because of this
19. (A)
extra component of C
13. (A) | a | = 6; | b | = 8

Let the components of A makes ,  and  | a  b | a 2  b2  2ab cos 


with X, Y and Z axes respectively, then  = 
=  82  62  2  8  6 cos 900 = 10 unit

cos 2   cos 2   cos 2   1 20. (C)


1 21. (3)
 3cos 2   1 or cos  
3 Area of required triangle = (1/2) area of
parallelogram.
A
 A x  A y  A z  A cos   1
3    ab  3 / 2
2
n=3

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XI_IIT_IR_FTM–1_26-06-2023
22. (6) Angle between A and B = 90   150
| a | 2,| b | 5 27. (4)
| a  b | | a || b | sin   8 28. (6)

4 (3iˆ  2jˆ  k)
ˆ  (2iˆ  6jˆ  mk)
ˆ 0
Sin  = 
5 = 6 – 12 + m = 0;  m = 6.
 a.b | a || b | cos  29. (5)

 3 Component of 2iˆ  3jˆ along ˆi  ˆj


= 10.     6
 5  (2iˆ  3j)
ˆ  (iˆ  ˆj)  A B  Acos.B
| a.b | 6 (2iˆ  3j).(i
ˆ ˆ  ˆj)  a cos .B
23. (6)
ˆ ˆ  ˆj)  x (iˆ  ˆj).(iˆ  ˆj)
(2iˆ  3j).(i
AB cos  = 8 ….. (i) 2
AB sin  = 8 3 ….. (ii) x=5
Divide (ii) by (i) 30. (12)
sin  W  FS  6
 3
cos 
F  3iˆ  cjˆ  2kˆ
tan = 3
S  4iˆ  2jˆ  3kˆ
 = 60°
 3  (4)  2c  2  (3)  6
24. (1)
 2c = 24
3 8
y x  c = 12
7 7
3 31. (B)
m1 
7
Number of electrons
m  m1  1
7
m
3
3 7 3 32. (D)
m   1
7 3 7 13.5
Number of electrons lost =  6.02 1023  3
25. (6) 27
x + y = 16
2 2 2  9.03 1023
Also, x + y (8)
(16 – 4)2 + 42 = 82 33. (C)
y 2  64  16  y 
2
Or Number of g-molecules of oxygen
Or y 2  64  256  y 2  32y
Or 32y  320 or y = 10N
x + 10 = 16 or x = 6N
34. (A)
26. (150)
R 1 Moles of O-atoms = 9  Moles of Cu
cos       60
B 2
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XI_IIT_IR_FTM–1_26-06-2023
35. (D)

Empirical mass = C3H4O

39. (B)

40. (D)

36. (A)

41. (C)
37. (B) Oxidation state of Br in Br2 , Br  and BrO3 is
0, -1 and +5, respectively.
42. (A)

43. (B)

Hydroquinol undergoes removal of hydrogen,


i.e.,oxidation and hence, it acts as a reducing
= 4 mole agent.
combusion of kerosene 44. (B)

2C14 H30  43O2  28CO2  30H2O

45. (C)

Oxidizing agent must undergo reduction. I-


can never be reduced.

46. (C)
38. (A)

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XI_IIT_IR_FTM–1_26-06-2023
In Ca(OCl)Cl, the oxidation state of ‘Cl’ is +1
and – 1 but in the product Cl2, it becomes
zero.

47. (C)

48. (A)
53. (3)
Phosphorus acid: H3PO3, oxidation state of P
= +3

49. (A)
54. (5)

Mass of nickel in NiC8 H14O4 N 4

50. (A)

55. (53)
51. (4) Let the sample contains x g of CaCO3

52. (7)

56. (7)

n-factor of

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XI_IIT_IR_FTM–1_26-06-2023
As 2S3  3   6   2    2  5  3 (x – 1) (x + 3) (2x – 7) (5 – x)  0
(x – 1) (x + 3) (2x – 7) (x – 5)  0
 24  2  28.
+ + +
–3 – 1 7 – 5

n-factor of NO3  5  2  3. 2

 x  (, 3]  [1, 7 / 2]  [5, )


The balanced reaction is as follows: 64. (B)
Clearly no prime number between 90 to 96
28NO3  3As 2S3  4H 2O  6AsO34  65. (A)
Clearly, option A is correct because
28NO  9SO 24  8H 
n(A) = n(B) = 3
x 28
So, the value of   7. 66 (D)
z 4 1 1
 >0
x 1 x  2
57. (267) (x  2)  (x  1)
0
(x  1)(x  2)
3
 0
(x  1)(x  2)
3
 0
(x  1)(x  2)
67. (A)
58. (5) x2 = 16  x=±4
2x = 6 x=3
No common value of x
68. (C)
2,3,5 and 7 are the only positive primes less
than 10.
69. (B)
Between any two real numbers there lie
infinitely many real numbers.
59. (3)
70. (B)
If A  1, 2  1, 2,3,5,9  A  3,5,9
71. (A)
x3  x  3
f(x) =
x2 1
Domain of the function is all real numbers
60. (568)
except where denominator is zero.
i.e. x2 – 1 = 0
x=1
 R – { 1}
72. (B)
x 2 (x 2  3x  2)
0 
x 2  x  30
x 2 (x  1)(x  2)
0
61. (C) (x  5)(x  6)
n (Ac Bc) = n[(A  B)c] = n(U)–n (AB) x  5,6
= n() – [n(A) + n(B) – n (A  B)] x  ( , 5)  [1, 2] (6, ) {0}
= 700 – [200 + 300 – 100] = 300.
62. (A)
 A  A    A  B  A   A  B  A
63. (A)
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XI_IIT_IR_FTM–1_26-06-2023
73. (B)
Obvious
74. (B)
A = [x : x  R, – 1 < x < 1]
B = [x : x  R : x  0 or x  2]
A  B = R – D, where D = [x : x  R, 1  x
< 2]
75. (D)
P(A) = {, {7}, {10}, {11}, {7, 10}, {7,
11}, {10, 11}, {7, 10, 11}}
Number of subsets = 2n  28  256
76. (D) 81. (7)
Collection of all intelligent women in x2  1
–3<0
Jalandhar is not a set as it is not a well 2x  5
defined collection. It is not possible to x 2  1  6x  15
 0
decide logically which woman is to be 2x  5
included in the collection and which is not to x 2  6x  16
 0
be included. 2x  5
77. (B) x 2  8x  2x  16
 0
P(A) = {, {}, {{}}, {, {}}} = {, {},  5
 
2 
x
{{}}, A} 
x(x  8)  2(x  8)
78. (A)  0
5
x+ y = 10; x + z = 9; y + z = 11 x
2
 x + y + z = 15 (x  8)(x  2)
x = 4, y = 6, z = 5  0
5
x
2


x  (–, –5/2)  (–2, 8)
79. (A)
82. (4)
x 4 –5x 2 + 4  0
(x2 – 1) (x2 – 4)  0
(x + 1) (x – 1) (x + 2) (x – 2)  0
+ – + – +
–2 –1 1 2

X  [–2,–1]  [1,2]
so number of integers = 4
83 (0)
.

80. (C)

84 (1)
.

85. (19)

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XI_IIT_IR_FTM–1_26-06-2023
n(A  B)= n(A)+n(B)–n(A  B)
0 n (A  B)  5
7  n (AB)  12
86 (2)
.

87. (12)
14x 9x – 30

x 1 x–4
14x 9x – 30
– 0
x 1 x–4
5x 2 – 35x  30
0
(x  1)(x – 4)
(x – 1)(x – 6)
0
(x  1)(x – 4)
+ – + – +
–1 1 4 6
x  (–1, 1]  (4,6]
so integer values of x = 0,1, 5, 6
sum of integer values = 12
88. (32)
A = {–2, –1, 0, 1, 2}
No. of subsets = 2n  25  32

89. (4)
log5  
x 5  x 1

 x 5  x  5 x  4

90. (3)
5  2x x
 5
3 6
5  2x x
  5
3 6
10  4 x  x
 5
6
10  5 x  30
x8
Therefore solutions for x  8 and x
 10 are 8,9,10

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