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rank the elements or compounds in the table below in decreasing order o…

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. table with substance a: cacl₂, b: lewis structure (o=n-cl with lone pairs), c: cl₂, d: lewis structure (c=c with four cl atoms, each with lone pairs), and boiling point selection dropdowns (select ↓) for each substance

Explanation:

Step1: Identify Bond Types and Forces

  • Substance A (\(CaCl_2\)): Ionic compound (metal + non - metal). Ionic bonds are strong electrostatic attractions between ions.
  • Substance B (Lewis structure: \(O = N - Cl\)): Covalent compound, polar (due to electronegativity differences in \(O - N\) and \(N - Cl\) bonds), so has dipole - dipole interactions and London dispersion forces.
  • Substance C (\(Cl_2\)): Diatomic non - metal, non - polar covalent, only London dispersion forces.
  • Substance D (Lewis structure: \(C_2Cl_4\)): Covalent compound, non - polar (symmetrical structure), only London dispersion forces. But it has a larger molar mass than \(Cl_2\).

Step2: Relate Forces to Boiling Points

  • Ionic compounds (like \(CaCl_2\)) have much stronger intermolecular forces (ionic bonds) than covalent compounds (which have dipole - dipole or London dispersion forces). So \(CaCl_2\) has the highest boiling point (rank 1).
  • Among covalent compounds:
  • Substance B is polar (dipole - dipole + London dispersion), Substance D is non - polar (London dispersion) but has a larger molar mass than Substance C (\(Cl_2\)). Molar mass affects London dispersion forces (larger molar mass → stronger London dispersion). Also, dipole - dipole forces are stronger than London dispersion forces of similar molar mass.
  • Molar mass of \(Cl_2\): \(M(Cl_2)=2\times35.45 = 70.9\space g/mol\)
  • Molar mass of \(C_2Cl_4\): \(M(C_2Cl_4)=2\times12.01+4\times35.45=24.02 + 141.8 = 165.82\space g/mol\)
  • Substance B: Let's calculate molar mass. \(O = 16.00\), \(N = 14.01\), \(Cl = 35.45\). \(M(ONCl)=16.00 + 14.01+35.45 = 65.46\space g/mol\)
  • The strength of intermolecular forces: Ionic (\(CaCl_2\)) > Dipole - dipole (\(ONCl\)) > London dispersion (\(C_2Cl_4\) > \(Cl_2\)) because \(C_2Cl_4\) has a larger molar mass than \(Cl_2\), so its London dispersion forces are stronger.

So the order of boiling points from highest to lowest is: \(CaCl_2\) (A) > \(ONCl\) (B) > \(C_2Cl_4\) (D) > \(Cl_2\) (C)

Answer:

  1. A (\(CaCl_2\))
  2. B (\(ONCl\))
  3. D (\(C_2Cl_4\))
  4. C (\(Cl_2\))