Every way to study, one workspace.
Notes, flashcards, quizzes and worked examples — all in one workspace, and every one of them tuned to your AP courses and the exact units you are studying. Bring in your own material, and Study Hub turns it into everything you need to study.
How it works
Four tools.
One workspace.
Notes
Electrochemistry
Electrolysis uses an electric current to break an ionic compound into its elements.
Tuned to you
Made for your spec,
not a generic one.
Choose AP Chemistry and that is exactly what you get back. The depth, the terminology and the worked methods all match the College Board course and the unit you are on — not a generic version pitched at no one in particular.
Every note carries its own subject, so the workspace always knows the context it is working in. Generate a quiz, a deck or a worked example and it inherits that grounding automatically — the right depth, the right terminology, the right methods.
That is the difference between revision built for your exam and revision built for nobody in particular.
Grounded in your course
Your material
Bring it in.
Study from it.
Study Hub is built around your own material. Drop in whatever you have — a textbook chapter, a stack of slides, your messy notes, even a photo of a page — and it becomes a source you can study from, and build every other tool on.
- Upload Word, PDF, Markdown and text files, slides, or a photo of a page
- Each source opens right beside a note — nothing has to be retyped
- Generate flashcards, a quiz or a worked example straight from it
- Everything stays organised by subject in one searchable library
One source in. A whole study set out.
Eva, built in
Stuck on a line?
Ask without leaving it.
Eva lives inside your notes. Select any sentence or figure and she can explain it, go simpler or deeper, give an analogy, or turn it into flashcards — and her answer threads right beside your work.
Electrochemistry
During electrolysis, ions move toward the electrodes and are discharged.
Remember that oxidation occurs at the anode, and the cathode is the negative one.
Eva · explaining your selection
Quick way to lock it in: anode, oxidation — “an ox.” Electrons are lost at the anode. In an electrolytic cell the anode is the positive terminal that pulls in the negative ions.
Honest by design
It coaches you.
It will not do it for you.
Anything that just spits out answers makes you feel productive and teaches you nothing. Study Hub is built the other way around: every tool is designed to get you to the answer yourself.
You stay the one doing the learning. That is the whole point.
- Quiz. Feedback points you toward the right thinking — it never reveals the answer.
- Worked examples. Steps reveal one at a time, so you try before you uncover the next.
- Eva. She explains the idea and reminds you of the method, but never hands over the answer.
We guide. We never give.
Here is the method — your turn
Think about which electrode attracts the positive ions, and what happens to them when they get there. Work the next line from that — you have got this.
Questions
Frequently asked.
Study Hub is Tutorioo's all-in-one AI study workspace. It brings your notes, flashcards, quizzes and worked examples together in one place, and it turns any material you bring in — notes, slides, PDFs, or even a photo of a page — into ready-to-use revision. Everything it makes is tuned to the subject, level and topic you are actually studying.
One workspace for
every way you study.
One workspace for every way you study, already tuned to your AP courses and units. Bring your material in and Study Hub does the rest — without ever doing the thinking for you.
No credit card required. Start in seconds.