QUESTION IMAGE
Question
rank the elements or compounds in the table below in decreasing order of their boiling points. that is, choose 1 next to the substance with the highest boiling point, choose 2 next to the substance with the next highest boiling point, and so on.
substance | chemical symbol, formula or lewis structure | boiling point
a | h—o—o—h | select
b | hgcl₂ | 4 (lowest)
c | hcl | select
d | h₂ | select
To rank the substances by boiling point, we analyze the intermolecular forces (IMFs):
Step 1: Identify Substances and IMFs
- Substance A (H₂O₂): Contains hydrogen bonding (H bonded to O) and dipole-dipole, plus London dispersion forces (LDF).
- Substance B (HgCl₂): Ionic compound (Hg²⁺ and Cl⁻), so ionic bonds (strongest IMFs for these options).
- Substance C (HCl): Polar molecule, dipole-dipole forces + LDF.
- Substance D (H₂): Nonpolar, only LDF (weakest IMFs).
Step 2: Relate IMFs to Boiling Point
Boiling point depends on IMF strength:
- Ionic bonds (HgCl₂) > Hydrogen bonding (H₂O₂) > Dipole-dipole (HCl) > LDF (H₂).
Step 3: Rank in Decreasing Order
- Highest Boiling Point: HgCl₂ (ionic, strongest IMFs) – but wait, wait! Wait, H₂O₂ has H-bonding, but HgCl₂ is ionic. Wait, no—wait, HgCl₂ is actually a covalent compound (mercury(II) chloride, molecular), but with significant polarity. Wait, correction: H₂O₂ has hydrogen bonding (strong), HgCl₂ is a polar molecule (dipole-dipole + LDF, but molar mass ~271 g/mol), HCl (molar mass ~36.5 g/mol, dipole-dipole), H₂ (molar mass 2 g/mol, LDF).
Wait, re-evaluating:
- H₂O₂: H-bonding (strong), molar mass ~34 g/mol.
- HgCl₂: Polar, molar mass ~271 g/mol (LDF increases with molar mass).
- HCl: Polar, molar mass ~36.5 g/mol.
- H₂: Nonpolar, molar mass 2 g/mol.
IMF strength hierarchy: H-bonding (H₂O₂) > Dipole-dipole (HgCl₂, HCl) + LDF (with HgCl₂ having much larger molar mass, so stronger LDF than HCl).
So correct order (decreasing boiling point):
- H₂O₂ (A) – H-bonding + LDF (molar mass 34)
- HgCl₂ (B) – Dipole-dipole + LDF (molar mass 271, strong LDF)
- HCl (C) – Dipole-dipole + LDF (molar mass 36.5)
- H₂ (D) – LDF (molar mass 2)
Wait, initial mistake: HgCl₂ is molecular (covalent), not ionic. So H-bonding in H₂O₂ is stronger than dipole-dipole in HgCl₂, but HgCl₂ has much higher molar mass, so LDF dominates? Wait, no—H-bonding is stronger than dipole-dipole + LDF for similar molar masses, but HgCl₂ is much heavier. Let’s check actual boiling points:
- H₂O₂: ~150 °C (decomposes, but boiling point ~150)
- HgCl₂: ~302 °C
- HCl: -85 °C
- H₂: -253 °C
Ah! So HgCl₂ has a higher boiling point than H₂O₂. So the correct order (decreasing boiling point) is:
- HgCl₂ (B) – ~302 °C
- H₂O₂ (A) – ~150 °C
- HCl (C) – -85 °C
- H₂ (D) – -253 °C
So the ranking is:
- Highest (1): HgCl₂ (B)
- Next (2): H₂O₂ (A)
- Next (3): HCl (C)
- Lowest (4): H₂ (D) (already marked as 4)
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- B. HgCl₂
- A. H₂O₂ (Lewis structure H-O-O-H)
- C. HCl
- D. H₂ (already set as 4)
(For the dropdowns: Highest boiling point is B (HgCl₂), next is A (H₂O₂), then C (HCl), then D (H₂).)