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Answers

to SelectedTextbook Questions

Chapter1

Therearenoinchapteranswersnecessaryforthischapter.

REVIEWQUESTIONS
1.1

1.3

1.5

1.7

1.9

1.11

1.13

1.15

PDTorphotodynamictherapyrequiresaphotosensitizer,lightandoxygen.
Thetumourmustbelocatedinaplacethatcanbesubjectedtolight.
Toxicologyisthestudyoftheilleffects(toxicity)ofsubstancesonthebody.Beforeintroducing
aporphyrinintothebodyforPDT,itmustbeestablishedthattheporphyrin,byitself,isnon
toxic.
Chemotherapyistheuseinmedicineofsubstancesthatareselectivelytoxictomalignantcells
ortoadiseasecausingvirusorbacterium.Assuch,avaccinewouldnotbeconsidered
chemotherapy.Theuseofgarlictotreatgangrene,ontheotherhand,isanexampleof
chemotherapy.Garlicisamildantisepticwhichkillsbacteriainfectingtissueleadingto
gangrene.
Yes,arsenicisgenerallyconsideredtobetoxic.However,Sec.6.1discusseshowthetoxicityof
arsenicvariesdramaticallydependingonthespeciescontainingthearsenicatoms.For
example,whereaselementalarsenicistoxic,thearseniccontainingspeciesinlobsterarenot.
BothVitaminB12andVisudyneareporphyrinbased.
Anaturalproductisacompoundproducedbyalivingorganism.
(a)TheHaberprocesscombineshydrogenandnitrogentomakeammonia.Ammoniaisusedto
makefertilizer.
(b)IntheBohrmodel,ahydrogenatomconsistsofanelectroninacircularorbitabouta
proton.
(c)Aconicalflaskusedinchemistrylabstocarryoutreactions.
(d)vanderWaalsequationisarelationbetweenthepressure,temperatureandvolumeofa
gasthataccountsforthenonzerosizeofthegasmoleculesandtheattractiveforcesbetween
them.
(e)Gibbsfreeenergy,G=HTS,combinesenthalpyandentropytogiveaquantitywhichmust
decreaseforanyprocessesthatactuallyhappens.
(f)Lewisiteisachlorinatealkylarseniccompoundwhichwasproducedasachemicalweapon
causingblistersandlungirritation.
(g)ALewisbasehasalonepairofelectronsthatitcandonatetoanelectronpairacceptora
Lewisacid.
(h)Schrodingersequationdeterminesthewavefunctionthatdescribesthestateofanatom.

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1.17

1.19

1.21

1.23

Anorganiccompoundconsistsofmoleculesmadefromcarbon,hydrogenandoxygenatoms.
Therecanbeotheratomsforexample,nitrogen,sulfur.
1.Acetylsalicylicacid,thecommonmildpainreliever,isaderivativeofthenaturalproduct,
salicin,obtainedfromwillowbark.
2.Morphine,obtainedfrompoppies,isapowerfulpainreliever.
3.Cocaine,obtainedfromthecocaplant,isalsoapainrelieverstillusedfortopicalpainrelief.
4.Quinine,anantimalariaagent,wasisolatedfromthebarkofcinchonatrees.
5.Menthol,isolatedfrommintleaves,isatopicalpainrelieverwhichalsorelievesitching.
Thechemicalstructureofthesyntheticdrugsisidenticaltothoseextractedfromplants.Itisthe
impuritiesassociatedwiththesyntheticprocedure,inthecaseofsyntheticdrugs,andthose
associatedwiththebiologicalsourceandthemeansofextraction,inthecaseofnatural
products,thataredifferent.
Mycotoxinsaretoxinsproducedbyfungisuchaspoisonousmushrooms.Penicillinisa
mycotoxinthatistoxictobacteria,makingittheoriginalantibiotic.Itisanaturalproductand
anorganiccompound.

SUMMARYANDCONCEPTUALQUESTIONS

1.25

1.27

Duetotheirsensitivity,porphyriasuffererswouldavoidsunlightlikethevampiresoflegend.
Infraredlightexcitesbendsandvibrationsofmolecularbonds.Infraredspectraareusedto
determinethetypesofbondspresentinamolecule.

Chapter2

2.1

Pure
Compounds
(h)
testosterone
(f)sodium
chloride
Elements

(d)gold

Mixture

Solutions

(a)mud
(e)milk

(b)air
(c)vinegar
(g)athletesurine
sample

Homogeneous

Heterogeneous

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

2.2

2.3

2.4

2.5

2.6

2.7

2.8

2.9

2.12

2.13

(a)symbolic,
(b)observable
(c)molecular
(a)Na,ClandCrarethesymbolsforsodium,chlorineandchromium,respectively.
(b)Zn,NiandKarethesymbolsforzinc,nickelandpotassium.
Sucroseisacolorlessmolecularsolidwithamoderatemeltingtemperature.Carbonisablack
solid(graphite)orahardcrystallinematerial(diamond).Botharenetworksolids.Hydrogenand
oxygenarebothcolorlessdiatomicgases.
(a)InCO,thereisonecarbonatomforeveryoxygenatom(ortheratioofCtoOatomsis1:1).
(b)InCH4,theCtoHatomratiois1:4.
(c)InC2H2,theCtoHatomratiois1:1.
(d)InC6H12O6,C,HandOatomsareinproportionto1:2:1.
Sixcarbondioxideandsixwatermoleculescombinetoformoneglucoseandsixoxygen
molecules.
Ozoneandnitricoxidegasescombinetoformoxygenandnitrogendioxidegases.Therelative
numbersofmoleculesofthefourrespectivespeciesare1:1:1:1i.e.thestoichiometric
coefficients.
Theatomisbiggerthanthenucleusbythefactor,100pm/0.001pm=105.Iftheradiusofthe
atomwere100m,thenthenucleusradiuswouldbe100m/105=0.001m=1mm.Verysmall
pebblesandsmallpeasarethissize.
(a)56
(b)30protons,34neutrons,30electrons
(a)3618Ar,3818Ar,4018Ar.%abundanceof4018Ar=99.600%
(b)69Ga:31protons,38neutrons
71Ga(%abundance,39.9%):31protons,40neutrons
(a)1.99875
(b)2.16522
(c)1.08329

2.14

2.18

2.19

2.20

Atomic weight of chlorine =

75.77
24.23
34.96885 +
36.96590 = 35.45
100
100

10
(a)59g
(b)1.90x1024atoms
0.97g

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REVIEWQUESTIONS

2.27

2.29

2.31

Thepieceoftablesaltisthemacroscopicview.Therepresentationofitsinternalstructureis
theparticulateview.Themacroscopicviewariseswhenthenumberofparticlesisverylarge
vast.
(a)physicalproperty
(b)chemicalproperty
(c)chemicalproperty
(d)physicalproperty
(e)physicalproperty
(f)physicalproperty
(a)colourlessisaphysicalproperty;burnsinairisachemicalproperty
(b)shinyandmetalarephysicalpropertiesofaluminium;orangeandliquidarephysical
propertiesofbromine;aluminiumreactsreadilywithbromineisachemicalpropertyof
aluminiumandbromine.

2.33

(a)27
(b)48
(c)62

2.35

57
27

2.37

2.39

2.41

205

Co ,

58
27

Co ,

60
27

Co

Tl

50%.

Symbol
Number of protons
Number of neutrons
Number of electrons in the neutral atom
Name of element

2.43

2.45

2.47

2.49

65

Cu
29
36
29
copper

86

Kr
36
50
36
krypton

195

Pt
78
117
78
platinum

81

Br
35
46
35
bromine

2
1
134.9g
Twoperiodshave8elements,twoperiodshave18elements,andtwoperiodshave32
elements.

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

2.51

2.53

(a)Bk
(b)Br
(c)B
(d)Ba
(e)Bi
(a)Siisametalloid,whilePisanonmetal
(b)Sihassomeelectricalconductivity,whilePdoesnot
(c)BothSiandParesolidsat25C

SUMMARYANDCONCEPTUALQUESTIONS

2.55

2.57

2.59

(a)anythingfromberyllium,Be,toradium,Ra
(b)anythingfromsodium,Na,toargon,Ar
(c)carbon,C
(d)sulphur,S
(e)iodine,I
(f)magnesium,Mg
(g)krypton,Kr
(h)germanium,Ge,orarsenic,As.
Boron
9.42x105mol
5.67x1019atoms

2.61

2.63
2.65

2.67

(a)Ar(1H)=1,Ar(11B)=10.9241,Ar(24Mg)=23.7994,andAr(63Cu)=62.4525
(b)Ar(1H)=1.0088,Ar(11B)=11.0199,Ar(24Mg)=24.0080,andAr(63Cu)=63
(c)Ar(1H)=1.0084,Ar(11B)=11.0162,Ar(24Mg)=24,andAr(63Cu)=62.9790

13C = -28.90 is consistent with a thermogenic sample


Weneedthedensityofiron,(d),inordertodeterminethemassof1cm3ofiron.Dividingthis
massbythemolarmassofiron,(b),determinesthenumberofmolesin1cm3ofiron.
MultiplyingthatnumberbyAvogadrosconstant,(c),providesthefinalanswerthenumberof
atomsin1cm3ofiron.
Youcouldcounthowmanyjellybeansittakestofillasmallercontainerfewerjellybeans,
easiertocountthenmultiplybytheratioofthevolumeofjartothatofthesmallercontainer.
Ifyouonlyhavethepicture,youcouldcountthenumberofjellybeanshalfwayaroundthe
perimeterofthecylindricaljar,andfrombottomtotopofthejar.Youhavedetermined
radiusofjarandtheheightofthejarinjellybeanlengthunits.Squaringthefirstquantity,then
dividingbyandmultiplyingbythesecondquantityprovidesanestimateofthenumberofjelly
beansinthejar.

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

Chapter3

3.1

3.2

3.3

3.4

3.6

3.10

3.11

3.14

3.15

3.16

3.17

BN
Sodiumchlorideisheldtogetherinalatticebystrongionicbondsattractionbetween
positivelyandnegativelychargedions.Siliconcarbideisanetworksolid.Theatomsare
similarlyheldtogetherinalattice,butinthiscaseitisbycovalentbonds.Covalentbondsare
generallystrongerthanionicbonds.Siliconcarbideisexpectedtohavethehighermelting
point.Thisisinfactthecasesiliconcarbidedecomposesat2730C,whilesodiumchloride
meltsat800C.
(a)Shas16protonsand16electrons.S2has16protonsand18electrons.
(b)Alhas13protonsand13electrons.Al3+has13protonsand10electrons.
(c)Hhas1protonand1electron.H+has1protonandnoelectrons.

N3,O2,F,Na+,Mg2+,andAl3+have7,8,9,11,12and13protons,respectively.Allofthese
specieshave10electrons,thenumberofelectronsinaneutralNeatom(10protons).
(a)equalamountsofNa+andFinNaF;twiceasmuchNO3asCu2+inCu(NO3)2;
equalamountsofNa+andCH3CO2inNaCO2CH3
(b)FeCl2andFeCl3arethecompoundsformedbyFe2+andFe3+,respectively
(c)Na2S,Na3PO4,BaSandBa3(PO4)2
(a)119.0gmol1
(b)53.5gmol1
(c)213gmol1
(d)120.3gmol1
(a)0.0250mol
(b)6.95x105mol
(c)5x103mol
(a)electrons
(b)electronsandtoalesserextentMg2+ions(theyarelessmobile)
(c)Mg2+andClions
(d)Mg2+andClions
(b),(d)and(e)aremolecularsubstances.
Siliconhasamuchhighermeltingpointbecauseitisanetworksolid.Itdoesnotconsistof
discretemolecules.Covalentbondingextendsthroughoutalatticegivingthematerial
exceptionalstrength.SulfurconsistsofdiscreteS8moleculeswhichare,inturn,heldinalattice
byweakerintermolecularbonds.
12

C,16Oand1Harethemostcommonisotopesofcarbon,oxygenandhydrogen.Themolarmass
ofthemostabundantisotopologue,12C21H616O,is46.04189gmol1.Thisisnotinexact
agreementwiththeexperimentalvalue.

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

3.18

3.19

3.23

(a)16.043gmol1
(b)58.080gmol1
(c)93.129gmol1
(a)1.53g
(b)4.60g
(c)4.59g
Asinglechlorineatom
C6H5Cl
112.008002;114.005052

3.24 C6H5CHCH2orC8H8

3.25 (a)C=Ostretchketone,aldehydeorcarboxylicacid
(b)CNHbendofanamine
(c)CNstretchofanitrile
(d)C=OandOHstretchesofacarboxylicacid
(e)NHandC=Ostretchesofanamide

REVIEWQUESTIONS

3.27

3.29

3.31

3.33

(a)molecular
(b)covalentnetwork
(c)molecular
(d)ionic(withsomecovalentcharacter)
(a)Se2
(b)F
(c)Fe2+andFe3+
(d)N3
(a)ammonium,NH4+,hasonemoreprotonthanelectronhencethe+1charge.
(b)phosphate,PO43,hasthreemoreelectronsthanprotonshencethe3charge.
(c)dihydrogenphosphate,H2PO4,hasonemoreelectronthanprotonshencethe1charge.
Na2CO3sodiumcarbonate
BaCO3bariumcarbonate
NaIsodiumiodide
BaI2bariumiodide

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3.35

3.36

3.37

3.39

3.41

(a)chlorinetrifluoride
(b)nitrogentrichloride
(c)strontiumsulphate(ionic)
(d)calciumnitrate(ionic)
(e)xenontetrafluoride
(f)oxygendifluoride
(g)potassiumiodide(ionic)
(h)aluminiumsulphide(ionicwithsomecovalentcharacter)
(i)phosphorustrichloride
(j) potassium phosphate (ionic)
(a)NaOCl(ionic)
(iii)electronsaresetfreewithinalatticeofpositiveions
Achemicalreactionofoxygenrequiresbreakingtheoxygenoxygendoublebond,andgenerally
formingotherbonds.Assuch,thepropensityofoxygentoreactdependsonthestrengthofthe
O=Obond,aswellasthestrengthofbondsformedinthereaction.Theboilingpointofoxygen
dependsonlyonthestrengthoftheweakintermolecularbondsbetweenneighbouringoxygen
molecules.
Onlythecalculatedmolecularmass,28.03132,ofC2H4comesreallyclosetothisvalue.Ifthe
datawerefromalowresolutionspectrometer,wecouldnotruleoutH2CN(molecularmass=
28.01873),N2(molecularmass=28.00614)andCO(molecularmass=27.99491).

3.43 Infraredspectroscopyandstructure
(a)absorptionfrequenciesincm1:
28502980

duetoalkylCHstretches
30003100

duetoaromaticCHstretches
27002850

duetoaldehydeCHstretch
17201740

duetoaldehydeC=Ostretch
17001725

duetocarboxylicC=Ostretch
675900,14001500and15851600
duetoaromaticCCbendsandstretches
(b)
30203100

duetoalkeneCHstretches
28502980

duetoalkylCHstretches
17301750

duetoesterC=Ostretch
16401670

duetoC=Cstretch
10001300

duetoesterCOstretch
(c)
32003550

duetoalcoholOHstretch
28502980

duetoalkylCHstretches
17051725

duetoketoneC=Ostretch
10001260

duetoalcoholCOstretch

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

3.45

(a)carboxylicacidandaromaticring
absorptionwavenumbersincm1:
(b)esterandaromaticring
(c)alcohol,nitrile,andaromaticring
32003550

broadpeakduetoalcohol(phenol)OHstretch
22102260

duetonitrileC Nstretch
(d)ketoneandalkene
30203100

duetoalkeneCHstretches
28502980

duetoalkaneCHstretches
17051725

duetoketoneC=Ostretch
(e)ketoneandester
30203100

duetoalkeneCHstretches
28502980

duetoalkaneCHstretches
17051725

duetoketoneC=Ostretch
17001725
duetoesterC=Ostretch(wouldprobablyoverlapwiththeketone
stretch)
10001300

duetoesterCOstretch

3.47 (a)159.688gmol1

(b)117.170gmol1

(c)176.1241gmol1

3.49

3.51

3.53

3.55

21millionkMol
CaS(c)
(a)305.4119gmol1
(b)1.8104mol
(c)39mg
(a)0.0130mol
(b)NiF2
(c)Nickel(II)fluoride

SUMMARYANDCONCEPTUALQUESTIONS

3.57

3.59

Sodiumchlorideisionic.Itssolidisheldtogetherbythestrongattractionbetweenoppositely
chargedions.ChlorineisamolecularsubstanceitconsistsofCl2molecules.Inthesolidstate,
themoleculesareheldtogetherbyweakintermolecularforces.
(a)silicondioxideisacovalentnetworksolidwhichmeltsatveryhightemperature
carbondioxideisamolecularsubstancewhichmelts(sublimesat1atmpressure)atverylow
temperature
(b)sodiumsulfideisanionicsubstancemeltingathightemperature
hydrogensulfideisamolecularsubstancewhichmeltsatverylowtemperature

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3.61

3.63

3.65

(a)calciumandchlorideionsareina1:2ratioinCaCl2
(b)calcium,carbonandoxygenatomsareina1:1:3ratioinCaCO3
(c)nitrogenandhydrogenatomsareina1:3ratioinNH3
(d)siliconandcarbonatomsareina1:1ratioinSiC
(e)hydrogenandchlorineatomsareina1:1ratioinHCl
Al3+ismostattractedtowaterbecauseithasthelargestmagnitudecharge.

(a)

OH
H
HH
O
Cl

Clostebolhasalkylgroups,analkene,aketone,achlorideandanalcoholgroupthelastfour
groupsarecircled.

(b)Thetestosteronemolecularionpeakisat288,whereastheclostebolmolecularionpeakis
at322.Therearepeaksatboththesepositions,thoughthepeakat322issmaller.Itwould
appearthatthismassspectrumdoesnotruleoutclostebol.However,chlorinatedcompounds
generallyshowpeaksassociatedwithlossofachlorineatomfromthemolecularion.We
thereforewouldexpecttoseeapeakat287.Nosuchpeakisseen.Thepeakat322mustbe
duetosomeothercompound.Thedataisconsistentwiththeexpertanalysis.

3.67

3.69

absorptionfrequenciesincm1
28502980
duetoalkylCHstretches
22102260
duetonitrileCNstretchnotgiveninTable3.5
17051725
duetoketoneC=Ostretch
16401670
duetoC=Cstretch
(a)LookfortheNHstretchofCH3CH2NHCH3apeakaround32503400cm1notseenfor
(CH3)3N.
(b)LookfortheketoneC=OstretchofCH3COCH3apeakaround17051725cm1ortheOH
stretchabroadpeakaround25003300cm1.
(c)LookforthealdehydeCHpeaks(2ofthem)ofCH3CH2CHO,around27002850cm1.

Chapter4

10

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

4.1

4.2

4.3
4.4

4.5

4.6

4.7

Covalentforcesholdthecarbonandhydrogenatomstogetherwithinamethanemolecule.
Weakdispersionforcesatypeofintermolecularornonbondingforceholdneighboring
methanemoleculestogether
The CFCs do not have H atoms bonded to C. Such H atoms readily react with hydroxyl radicals.
Mostgreenhousegasabsorptiontakesplaceintroposphere.ThisiswheremostoftheIR
absorbingcompoundsarefound.IRabsorbingmoleculesaregenerallyheavierthanmostair
molecules,andarefoundwithinthelowestlayeroftheatmosphere.
NitrousoxideabsorbsstronglyinregionsoftheIRspectrumemittedbytheearththatcarbon
dioxideandwaterdonotabsorb.
8.4x1017g
Today, I drank from a plastic cup. The plastic material was polymerized from monomers
obtained from fractionation and cracking, etc., of petroluem extracted from fossil deposits. I am
using a number of plastic products today for example, the keyboard keys I am typing on, and
the computer monitor I am viewing. Another fraction of the same petroleum was used to drive
my car. Natural gas from fossil deposits of mostly methane is used to heat my house.

4.8
H3C

CH3

CH3

H3C

H3C

CH3

CH3
H3C
CH3

CH3

CH3

CH3

F
F

CH3

CH3

H3C

4.11

4.12

H3C

F
F

F
F

F
F

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11

REVIEWQUESTIONS

4.13

4.15

4.17

4.19

4.21

4.23

4.24

4.25

4.27

4.29

(a)CovalentbondsholdthenitrogenatomstogetherintheN2molecules,insidetheclathrate
hydrate.
(b)DispersionforcesattracttheN2andH2Omoleculeswithintheclathratehydratecage.
(c)HydrogenbondingholdsneighboringH2Otogethermoleculestomaketheclathratehydrate
cage.
(d)DispersionforcesattracttheN2andO2moleculeswithintheclathratehydratecage.
Agreenhousepreventsconvectionofheatakeycomponentoftheheatflowfromtheearths
surfaceoutintotheatmosphere.Greenhousegasesdonotpreventconvection.However,like
thegreenhousewallsandroof,theyreflectsomeoftheradiationemittedbytheearthback
downagain.Thisoccursbecausemuchoftheabsorbedenergyisreemitted(arandomprocess)
backtowardstheearth,orspreadtosurroundingmoleculesbycollisionaldeexcitation.
CH3CH3(g);ozone,O3(g);andchloroform,CHCl3
1750isthebeginningoftheindustrialrevolution.Radiativeforcingofourclimatewassubject
onlytonaturalfluctuationsbeforethattime.
Cloudscausecoolingbyreflectingincomingsunlightbackoutintospace.
Increasinglevelsoftroposphericozonehasapositiveradiativeforcingeffect.
Stratosphericozonehasanegativeradiativeforcingeffect.ItabsorbsUVlightpreventingit
fromreachingtheearthssurface.Thestratosphereisheated,butthesurfacecools.
Inthetroposphere.
Theradiativeforcingandglobalwarmingpotentialofmethanearebothenhancedbymethanes
strongabsorptionofIR.However,theglobalwarmingpotentialalsodependsuponhowlong
methanestaysintheatmospherebeforebeingeliminatedbyoxidationandsubsequently
returningtothesurfaceinrain.Theglobalwarmingpotentialofmethaneisanestimateofhow
muchagivenmassofmethanewillcontributetoglobalwarmingrelativetothesamemassof
carbondioxide.
ConsultingtherankingoflevelsofscientificuncertaintyinFigure2.20ofthe2007IPCCsummary
report:
troposphericcarbondioxide>troposphericnitrousoxide>stratosphericozone>jetcontrails
(weunderstandthatitseffectisverysmall)>solarirradiance

12

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

4.31Theadvantagesofusingbiofuelsareasfollows:
(1)Theyarerenewablewegetanewcropeachyear.
(2)Thereisnonetadditiontoatmosphericcarbondioxide.AtmosphericCO2isconsumedas
theplantgrows.Itisreturnedtotheatmospherewhenthefueliscombusted.
(3)Biofuelcanbeproducedinmostplacesprovidedasuitablecropcanbefound.Fossilfuels
arefoundonlyincertainplaces.

Thedisadvantagesofthebiofuelstrategy,inpractice,areasfollows:
(1)Energyisneededtoproducethecropandmanufacturethebiofuel.Theseenergydemands
mustbeminimizedtomakebiofuelproductionworththeeffort.
(2)Onlyasmallportionofcorn,forexample,canbeusedtoproducebiofuels.Thecellulosic
partoftheplant(itsbulk),issimplyplowedbackintothefield.Thissignificantlyreducesthe
viabilityofbiofuelasanalternativeenergystrategy,ascurrentlyproducedinNorthAmerica.
(3)Biofuelproductiontakeslandawayfromfoodproduction.Thishasdrivenupfoodpricesin
NorthAmericainrecentyears.

4.33 TheprincipaldifferencebetweenthedatasetsisthesizeoftheannualoscillationinCO2level.
TheCO2leveldropsinthespringinsummermonthsduetothegrowthofvegetationontheland
massesofthenorthernhemisphere.Itrisesagainwhenthisgrowthstops.Theantarcticdatais
lesssensitivetothisoscillationsinceitissofarawayfromthenorthernhemisphere.

4.35
O
(a)
(b)
CH3

CH3

(c)

Cl
Cl

4.37

(a)alkane
(b)alkeneandalkane
(c)alkene,alkaneandalcohol
(d)Benzaldehyde has aromatic and aldehyde functional groups

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

13

4.39

(a)
CH3
H3C

CH3

CH3

(b)
CH3
CH3

H3C

CH3

CH3

(c)
H3C
CH3
H3C

CH3

CH3

(d)
H3C

H3C

4.41

4.43

CH3

CH3

CH3

Presenceofastrongoxidizingagentonmarsmeanstheenvironmentishostiletomanyfragile
moleculesfoundonearth.Ontheotherhand,togetherwithsuitablereducingagents,astrong
oxidizingagentsuchashydrogenperoxideprovidesapotentialrapidsourceofenergythat
evolvinglifeformsmightexploit.Hereonearth,animalformsoflifeexploitthereadily
available,strongoxidizingagent,O2,toprovideaquicksourceofenergy.

14

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

SUMMARYANDCONCEPTUALQUESTIONS

4.45

4.47

4.49

4.51

Table7.3showsthebondenergiesofCH,CFandCClbondstobe413,485and339kJmol1,
respectively.WhenahydroxylradicalreactsitbreakstheCXbondandformsanOXbond.The
bondenergiesofthebondswithOare463forOHand218forOCl.Thereisnoenergygiven
fortheOFbond.Here,weseethatthemostfavorablereactionisthatwhichbreakstheCH
bondtoformthestrongerOHbond.
SF6hasmorebondsthanCO2andconsequentlymorevibrationalmodesandmoreassociated
IRabsorptionpeaks.Thisanditslonglifeintheatmosphereincreaseitsglobalwarming
potential.
Perhapsweshouldlookforoxygen,waterandcarbondioxideatleastiftheimportanceof
thesemoleculestolifeonearthisaguide.Plantsuselightandcarbondioxidetodrivetheirlife
processes.Animalsreactfuels(food)withoxygentodrivetheirprocesses.Wateristhe
mediuminwhichthechemistryprimarilytakesplace.
2106g.(Basedontheassumptionsthatmycarconsumesabout10Lofgasolineper100km
travelled,andItravelabout10000kmperyear.Densityofgasoline=0.7g/mL)

4.53

4.55

Fossilfuelsaremorevaluableasfeedstocksfortheproductionofpolymers.Thisshouldbethe
mostimportantuse.
No,weshouldnotbeconcernedabouthumanbreathingasasourceofatmosphericcarbon
dioxide.Themainpointofconcernsaboutglobalwarmingistheimpactonhumanlife(yes,
otherspeciesarealsoaffected).Floodingofcoastalareas,associatedwithglobalwarming,isa
concernbecauseofthenegativeimpactonhumanslivingintheseareas.Humanbreathinghas
tobeanacceptablevariable,asthereisnoalternative.

Chapter5
5.2

5.4

5.5

(a)balancedforelectricalchargeandforallrelevantatoms
(b)balancedforelectricalchargeandforallrelevantatoms
(c)NOTbalancedforelectricalcharge;balancedforCaandC,butNOTforOatoms
4.5molofO2(g)
3.0molofAl2O3(s)
(a)Asmallamountofsolidsodiumchlorideinwaterhasahigherchemicalpotentialthana
dilutesolutionofsodiumchloride.
(b)Adilutesolutionofsodiumchlorideismorestablethanasmallamountofsolidsodium
chlorideinwater.

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

15

5.6

5.7

5.11

5.12

5.17

5.19

5.20

(a)Neither.Chemicalpotentialonbothsidesofthesereactionsareequal.
(b)Amixtureofsolidcalciumcarbonateinpurewaterhasahigherchemicalpotentialthana
mixturecontainingsolidcalciumcarbonateandCa2+(aq)ionsandCO32(aq)bothata
concentrationof6105molL1.
(c)AmixturecontainingsolidcalciumcarbonateandCa2+(aq)ionsandCO32(aq)bothata
concentrationof6105molL1ismorestablethanamixtureofsolidcalciumcarbonateinpure
water.
26.7gofoxygenreactswith25.0gofglucose.36.7gofCO2and15.0gofH2Oareformed.
(a)COisthelimitingreactant
(b)407gofCH3OHproduced
(c)14gofH2remain
(a)Fe2O3isthelimitingreactant
(b)35.0gofFe

Theoreticalyieldofhydrogen=15.7g
Percentyieldofhydrogen=86.6%
MasspercentofNiS=13.8%
(a)Fortheproductionofmaleicanhydridebyoxidationofbenzene
(i)theCatomefficiency=66.7%

theOatomefficiency=33.3%

theHatomefficiency=33.3%

(ii)theoverallatomefficiency=44.1%

(iii)theEfactor=1.27
(b)Fortheproductionofmaleicanhydridebyoxidationofbutene

(i)theCatomefficiency=100.0%

theOatomefficiency=50.0%
theHatomefficiency=25.0%

(ii)theoverallatomefficiency=64.5%
(iii)theEfactor=0.55

REVIEWQUESTIONS

5.21

5.23

(a) H 2 O(g)
H 2O(l) isthespontaneousdirectionofreaction

(b)Watervapourat1barpressurehasahigherchemicalpotentialthanliquidwaterat25C.

(a)balancedforelectricalchargeandforallrelevantatoms
(b)balancedforelectricalchargeandforallrelevantatoms
(c)balancedforelectricalchargeandforallrelevantatoms

16

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

5.25

5.27

5.29

5.31

5.33

5.35

5.37
5.39

5.41

5.43

(a)Amixturecontainingapieceofcopperina1molL1aqueoussilvernitratesolutionhasa
higherchemicalpotentialthanamixturecontainingsomesolidsilverinanaqueoussolutionin
whichtheconcentrationofCu2+(aq)ionsisabout0.5molL1andtheconcentrationofAg+(aq)
ionsisabout1x1010molL1.
(b)Amixturecontainingsomesolidsilverinanaqueoussolutioninwhichtheconcentrationof
Cu2+(aq)ionsisabout0.5molL1andtheconcentrationofAg+(aq)ionsisabout1x1010molL1is
morestablethanamixturecontainingapieceofcopperina1molL1aqueoussilvernitrate
solution.
theoreticalyieldofCO2=36.6g
massofargininerequired=275mg
massofornithineproduced=210mg
Thetotalmassofthebeakersandsolutionsafterreactionisthesameasitwasbeforereaction
(167.170g)
(a)1.76kg
(b)1.19kg
617kg
TiO1.5orTi2O3

11.2%
66.7kg
weightpercentCuSinore=30%
weightpercentCu2Sinore=70%

SUMMARYANDCONCEPTUALQUESTIONS

5.45

(a)8.8g.
(b)1.5
(c)FeBr3
(d)2Fe(s)+3Br2()2FeBr3

(e)iron(III)bromide

(f)(i)TRUE

(ii)FALSE
(iii)FALSE

(iv)FALSE

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

17

5.47

5.49

(a)65.0%Ptbyweight.
9.3%Nbyweight.
23.6%Clbyweight.
(b)massofammoniarequired=1.31g.
massofPt(NH3)2Cl2produced=11.6g.
(1)Thereismorethanenoughzinc.Inthiscase,HClisthelimitingreactantallofitreacts,
producingenoughH2toinflatetheballoon.0.1070.050mol=0.057molofzincremains.
(2)Inthiscase,thereisjustenoughzinctoconsumealloftheHCl.ThesameamountofH2is
producedasinpart(1)i.e.enoughtoinflatetheballoon.Nozincremains.
(3)Inthiscase,thereisnotenoughzinctoconsumealloftheHCl.Zincisthelimitingreactant.
Only40%asmuchH2isproducedasinpart(1)i.e.notenoughtoinflatetheballoon.Nozinc
remains.

Chapter6

6.1

6.2

6.3

6.4

6.5

(a)108.99mL
(b)109.06mL
(c)100.01mL
(d)100.00mL
(e)100.03mL

35s
(a)1.10x103kJ
(b)727kJ
diethylether>carbondisulfide>acetone>bromine>hexane>ethanol>water
Theorderofnormalboilingpointsisthesameastheorderofenthalpychangesofvaporization.
Thisiswhatweexpectbecausebothboilingpointandenthalpychangeofvaporizationincrease
withincreasingstrengthofintermolecularforces.

18

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

6.6

6.7

6.9

6.10

6.12

6.13

6.15

Thesurfacetensionisthatwhichpullsthedropintoasphericalshapeminimizingsurfacearea.
Sincethisforceissmallerfordiethyletherweexpectitsdropstobeevenmoredistortedby
gravitythanthoseofwater.
(a)Theintermolecularforceofattractionbetweenwatermoleculesandotherwatermolecules
orthemoleculesonthesurfaceofthebladeofgrassissufficienttoallowwatermoleculesto
sticktogetheronthebladeofgrass.
(b)Whenapieceofpaperburns,carboncarbonandcarbonhydrogenbondsarebrokenwhile
newbondswithoxygenareformed.Intramolecularforcesarethelosing(inthebreaking
reactantbonds)andwinningforces(inthemakingofbonds)atworkwhenpaperburns.
(c)Intermolecularforcesholdingwatermoleculestogether,andnexttoclothesfibermolecules,
areovercomewhenwetclothesarehungouttodry.
(d)Intermolecularforcescausewatermoleculestoarrangethemselvesintoalatticeoflowest
potentialenergy.Thefreezertakesawaythekineticenergytherebyliberated,leavingwaterin
itscrystalline,solidformice.

(a)HFismorepolarthanHI
(b)BCislesspolarthanBF
(c)CSiismorepolarthanCS
(a)TheC=OandCHbondsarepolar,whileCCandC=Carenonpolar.
(b)TheC=Obondisthemostpolar,withOatthenegativeend.
CS2andCO2arenonpolarbecauseoftheirlinearshape.SO2andH2Oarepolarbecauseoftheir
bentshape.Thetwobonddipolesvectorsonlypartiallycancelout,leavingaNETdipole
moment.
(a)BFCl2istrigonalplanar.IthasaNETdipolebecauseoneofthethreebondsisdifferent
morepolarthantheothertwo.IfthethreesubstituentsonBwerethesame,asinBCl3,then
thebonddipoleswouldcancel.
(b)NH2Clistrigonalpyramidal.IthasaNETdipolebecauseitisasymmetricalandhasonebond
differentfromtheothertwoNClvs.NH.
(c)SCl2isbentlikewater.IthasaNETdipolebecausetheSClbonddipolesonlypartiallycancel
out.
(a)BentSO2hasanetdipole.So,therearedipoledipoleforcesbetweenneighboring
molecules.
(b)LinearCO2hasnonetdipole.Therearenodipoledipoleforcesbetweenthesemolecules
onlydispersionforces.
(c)HClhasjustonepolarbond,andsohasadipolemoment.Therearedipoledipoleforces
betweenneighboringmolecules.

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

19

6.17 CH3OOH
|
CH3CH3
showsthehydrogenbondingbetweenneighbouringmethanolmoleculesastheymovepast
eachother.

6.19 (a)bromine

(b)butane

6.23 (a)ICl

(b)Krypton

(c)ethanol

6.24 (a)dispersionforces

(b)hydrogenbondsanddispersionforces

(c)dispersionforces

6.27 Mg2+(aq)andBr(aq)arethemainspeciespresentinsolutionwhensomemagnesiumbromide,
MgBr2(s),isdissolvedinwater.

6.28 (a)soluble
H 2O
LiNO3 s
Li (aq) NO3 (aq)

(b)soluble

6.29

H 2O
CaCl2 s
Ca 2 (aq) 2 Cl (aq)

(c)insoluble
(d)soluble

H2O
NaCH 3COO s
Na (aq) CH 3COO (aq)

(a)Ammonia,NH3(g),issolubleinwaterbecausewatermoleculescanmakestronghydrogen
bondswithammoniamoleculesOHandHN.
(b)Hydrogenchloride,HCl(g),issolubleinwaterbecausewatermoleculescanmakestrong
hydrogenbondswithHClmoleculesOHonly.
(c)Iodine,I2(s),isnonpolarandinsolubleinwater.Onlydispersionlikeforcescanbemade
betweenwaterandI2.ThisinteractionisweakerthanthedispersionforcebetweenI2
molecules.
(d)Octane,C8H18()isnonpolarandinsolubleinwater.Onlydispersionlikeforcescanbemade
betweenwaterandoctane.Thisinteractionisweakerthanthedispersionforcebetween
octanemolecules.

20

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

6.30

6.31

(a)Benzene,C6H6(),isnonpolarandsolubleinnonpolaroctane.Dispersionforcesareallthat
areatplayinthepuresubstancesandmixtures.Theentropyofmixingissufficienttodrive
dissolution.
(b)Waterispolarandinsolubleinnonpolaroctane.Itturnsoutthatreasonforthisismore
subtlethanappears.Dissolvingoctaneinwaterdecreasestheentropyofneighboringwater
molecules.Thiseffectoverwhelmstheentropyofmixing,anddissolutionisnotspontaneous.
(c)Iodine,I2(s),isnonpolarandsolubleinnonpolaroctane.Dispersionforcesareallthatareat
playinthepuresubstancesandmixtures.Theentropyofmixingissufficienttodrive
dissolution.
Butan1ol,CH3CH2CH2CH2OH(),shouldbemoresolubleinhexanethanbutan2,4diol,
HOCH2CH2CH2CH2OH().Thelattercompoundhastwohydroxyl(OH)groupsvs.onlyonefor
theformer.LiketheOHofwater,thesehydroxylsdonotspontaneouslymixwithhexane
thatis,notwithoutthehelpofthefavorabledispersioninteractionsofthealkylchains.

6.32

(a) HBr(g) + H 2 O(l)


H3O+ (aq) + Br - (aq)

only some ionised


+

(b) HF(aq) + H 2 O(l)


H 3O (aq) + F (aq)

only some ionised


+

(c) HCOOH(aq) + H 2 O(l)


HCOO (aq) + H 3O (aq)
2
C12 H 22 O11 (aq)
(d) C12 H 22 O11 (s)

H O

6.36

6.37

6.38

CuCO3 (s)
(a) Cu 2+ (s) + CO32 (aq)
+

Na andCl arespectatorions

(b)Noprecipitateforms

(c) Ni 2+ (s) + 2 OH (aq)


Ni(OH) 2 (s)
+

K and Cl are spectator ions


Fe2+isoxidizedtoFe3+.TheoxidizingagentisMnO4.MnO4isreducedtoMn2+.Fe2+isthe
reducingagent.
(a)HCOOHistheacidreactant,whileOHisthebasereactant.
(b)H2CO3istheacidreactant,whileNH3isthebasereactant.
(c)H2C4H4O6istheacidreactant,whileHCO3isthebasereactant.
(d)H3O+istheacidreactant,whileCH3NH2isthebasereactant.

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

21

6.39

2 H 2 O(l)
(a) H 3O + (aq) + OH (aq)

Li+andBrarespectatorions
HCO3 (aq) + H 2 O(l)
(b) H 2 CO3 (aq) + OH (aq)
and HCO3 (aq) + OH (aq)
CO32 (aq) + H 2 O(l)
K+isaspectatorion.

(c) H 3O + (aq) + CH 3 NH 2 (aq)


H 2 O(l) + CH 3 NH 3+ (aq)

NO3isaspectatorion

H 2 Citrate (aq) + H 2 O(l)


(d) H 3Citrate(aq) + OH (aq)
H 2 Citrate (aq) + OH (aq)
HCitrate 2 (aq) + H 2 O(l)

6.40

Citrate3 (aq) + H 2 O(l)


HCitrate 2 (aq) + OH (aq)

Na+isaspectatorion
(a)Co2+istheLewisacid,whileClistheLewisbase.
(b)Fe2+istheLewisacid,whileCNistheLewisbase.
(c)Ni2+istheLewisacid,whileCH3NH2istheLewisbase.
(d)Cu2+istheLewisacid,whileClandNH3aretheLewisbases.

6.41

H
H

O
Fe

H
H

22

Al

H
H

O
H

H
O

H
O

3+

Mn

H
H

H
H

Cr

3+

H
O

O
H

H
O

O
H

2+

H
O

O
H

2+

H
H

H
H

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

6.42

(a)[Co(H2O)6]2+(aq)+4Cl(aq)[CoCl4]2(aq)+6H2O()
Lewisbase,Cl,competessuccessfullywiththeLewisbase,H2O,tocomplexCo2+.
(b)[Fe(H2O)6]2+(aq)+6CN(aq)[Fe(CN)6]4(aq)+6H2O()
Lewisbase,CN,competessuccessfullywiththeLewisbase,H2O,tocomplexFe2+.
(c)[Ni(H2O)6]2+(aq)+2CH3NH2(aq)[Ni(CH3NH2)2]2+(aq)+6H2O()
Lewisbase,CH3NH2,competessuccessfullywiththeLewisbase,H2O,tocomplexNi2+.
(d)[Cu(H2O)6]2+(aq)+4Cl(aq)+2NH3(aq)[Cu(NH3)2Cl4]2(aq)+6H2O()
Lewisbases,ClandNH3,competesuccessfullywiththeLewisbase,H2O,tocomplexCu2+.

6.43 0.478molL1

6.47 (a)(a)
(b)(a)
(c)(b)
(d)(a)
(e)(a)and(b)havethesameconcentration(b)isjustasampleof(a).

6.49 (a)0.50molL1NH4+(aq)and0.25molL1SO42(aq)

(b)0.246molL1Na+(aq)and0.123molL1CO32(aq)

(c)0.056molL1H3O+(aq)andNO3(aq)

REVIEWQUESTIONS

6.51

6.53

6.55

6.57

6.59

6.61

Waterhasalowervapourpressurethanhexane,3.17vs.20.2kPaat25C.Ittakesahigher
temperaturetoget1atmvapourfromwater,thanitdoesfromhexanei.e.waterhasahigher
boilingpoint.
(a)Intramolecularforces.
(b)Intermolecularforces.
(c)Intramolecularforces.
(d)Intermolecularforces.
(a)CO
(b)PCl
(c)BO
(d)BF
HF>HCl>HBr>HI
(a)BeCl2isnonpolar.
(b)HBF2ispolar.ThenegativeendisatthetwoFatoms.
(c)CH3Clispolar.ThenegativeendisattheClatom.
(d)SO3isnonpolar.
H2S(g)

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

23

6.63

(b)

HCOOH

6.65

6.67

6.69

6.71

6.73

6.75

6.77

6.79

6.81

(Kr)Itisbiggerwithmoreelectrons
(a)dispersionforces
(b)metallicbonds
(c)dipoledipoleanddispersionforces
(d)Hbondsanddispersionforces
(a)<(b)<(c)<(d).(a),(b)and(c)aregasesat25oCand1atm.
(a)higher.
(b)higher.
(c)unchanged.
(d)higher.
(e)smaller.
(f)higher.
Propan1ol(CH3CH2CH2OH)hasahigherboilingpointthanmethylethylether(CH3CH2OCH3),a
compoundwiththesameempiricalformula,becausepropan1olmoleculescanformhydrogen
bonds,whereasmethylethylethercannot.
(a)O2
(b)SO2
(c)HF
(d)GeH4

(a)Waterhasahigherviscositythanhexane,inspiteofitssmallerdispersionforces,becauseof
itsstronghydrogenbonds.
(b)Glycerol(propan1,2,3triol,HOCH2CHOHCH2OH)isevenmoreviscousthanwaterbecauseit
hasthreeOHgroupsandcanformmorehydrogenbondsthanwater.
Themeltingpointoffumaricacid(287C)ismuchhigherthanthatofmaleicacid(131C)even
thoughthesesubstancesarejustcisandtransisomers.
Maleicacidmakesastrongintramolecularhydrogenbondthisreducesopportunitiesfor
intermolecularhydrogenbonds,asanOandHarealreadyhydrogenbonding.Strong
intermolecularpairsofhydrogenbondsareformedbetweenadjacentfumaricacidmolecules.

24

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

6.83

6.85

6.87

6.89

6.91

(a)TheOend(thenegativeend)ofwaterpointstoCa2+.
(b)TheHend(thepositiveend)ofwaterpointstoBr.
(c)TheHend(thepositiveend)ofwaterpointstoCr2O72.
(d)TheOend(thenegativeend)ofwaterpointstoNH4+(aq).
H2O(),Ag+(aq),NO3(aq),K+(aq)andCl(aq).
Cookingoilisnotmisciblewithwaterbecauseitsmoleculesarenonpolar(orveryweakly
polar).Theydonotinteractwithwaterstronglyenoughforwatertosolvatethemwater
moleculesprefertointeractwithotherwatermolecules.Cookingoilissolubleinhexanea
nonpolarsolvent.
Theconcentrationsofhydroniumionandhydroxideionequalinpurewaterbecauseofthe
stoichiometryoftheselfionizationreaction,

2H2O()H3O+(aq)+OH(aq)
Sincebariumsulfate,BaSO4(s),precipitatesfromwater,whereasiron(II)sulfatedoesnot,we
concludethatBaSO4(s)isinsolubleinwater(ithasaverylowsolubility)whereasFeSO4(s)is
soluble.

6.93

2 Cr2 O7 2- (aq) + 28 H + (aq) + 12 e-


4 Cr 3+ (aq) + 14 H 2 O()
3C2 H 5OH(aq) + 3H 2 O()

3CH 3COOH(aq) + 12 H + (aq) + 12 e-

Here,ethanol,C2H5OH,isoxidizedtoaceticacid,CH3COOH.Dichromate,Cr2O72,istheoxidizing
agent.Cr2O72isreducedtoCr3+.Ethanolisthereducingagent.

6.95

6.97

Whennitricaciddissolvesinwater,nitrateandhydroniumionsareproduced.
Whenbariumhydroxidedissolvesinwater,Ba2+(aq)andOH(aq)areproduced.
(a)[Fe(NH3)6]2+
(b)[Zn(CN)4]2
(c)[MnF6]4
(d) [Fe(CN)6]3
(e) [CoCl4]2-

6.99

(f){Ni(NH3)4(H2O)2]2+

Topreparethedesiredsolution,carefullyweigh0.849gofAgNO3(s),addittothevolumetric
flask,add~150mLofdeionizedwater,stoppertheflaskandshaketodissolvetheAgNO3and
ensureahomogenenoussolution.AftertheAgNO3hasdissolved,topupthevolumetothe250
mLmarkwithdeionizedwateraddtheadditionaldeionizedwaterinsteps,swirlingbetween
eachsteptoensureahomogeneoussolution.

6.101 1250mLof0.060molL1Na2CO3solutionhasthegreatermassofsolute.

6.103 0.494g

6.105 5.08L
Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

25

6.107 3.38g

6.109 concentrationofNa2CO3=0.254molL1

concentrationofNa+=0.508molL1

concentrationofCO32=0.254molL1

SUMMARYANDCONCEPTUALQUESTIONS

6.111 (a)Kineticenergyofthewatermoleculeswithinandonthesurfaceofthebubblepreventsits
collapse.Thesehotmoleculessmashintotheirneighbourspushingopenthebubble.
(b)Bubblesformwhenthevapourpressurewithintheheatedliquidslightlyexceeds
atmosphericpressureenoughtopushopenthebubble.

6.113 (a)Hydroniumionsappeartodiffuseveryquicklythroughanaqueoussolutionfasterthan
theyshouldbeabletoviadiffusionbecausethetransferofhydroniumacrossaclusterof
watermoleculesisachievedthroughsuccessiveH+iontransfersbetweenadjacentwater
molecules.

(b)EachprotontransferinvolvesoneOatomofahydroniumiontakingthepairofelectrons
fromanHatombondedtoit,andanotherOatom(onawatermoleculeontheothersideofthe
H)donatingalonepairofelectronstothereleasedprotoni.e.,acceptingtheproton.

6.115 (a)Here,theelectrostaticattractionoftheAg+andClionsovercomesthedipoleionforces
betweensolvatingwatermoleculesandtheionstocausegrowthoftheioniclattice.
(b)ThelatticeisanarrayofAg+andClions.ItdoesnotconsistofdistinctAgClmolecules.

6.117 (a)TheelectronsintheOHbondoftheCH3COOHmoleculegoentirelytotheOatomreleasing
aprotonwhichattachestoalonepairofelectronsonawatermolecule.

(b)Acovalentbondisbrokenandanewonemade.

6.119 (a)AmmoniaistheLewisbase,donatinglonepairsofelectronstothecopperatom,intheform
ofacoordinatebond.Cu2+istheLewisacid.
(b)AmmoniamoleculesreplacewatermoleculesbecausetheNinammoniaformsastronger
coordinatebondwithcopperthantheOinwaterammoniaisabetterligand.

6.121 (a)anacidbasereaction
(b)precipitationreaction
(c)acidbase,andcomplexationreaction
(d)oxidationreductionreaction

26

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

Chapter7

7.1

7.3

7.4

7.5

7.6

7.7

7.10

7.11
7.12

7.15

7.16

(a)1moleachofH+(aq)ionsandOH(aq)ions,thathavenotreacted,havemoreenergythan1
molofwater.
(b)Yourfingerswouldfeelhot.Thisisbecausethenegativeenergychangerequiresremovalof
excessenergy.
Thechemicalpotentialenergystoredinabatterycanbeconvertedtothemechanicalenergyof
soundwavesfromyourmp3playertheelectricalandmagneticenergyofanimagetakenby
yourdigitalcamera,orthelightenergyemittedbyaflashlighttonameafewpossibilities.
Heatalwaysflowsfromhighertemperature(water)tolowertemperature(air).
(a)Thesystemisthecontentsofthecombustionchamberofthegasfurnaceamixtureofair
andmethane.Thesurroundingsarethefurnaceandeverythingaroundit.
(b)Thesystemisthewaterdropsplustheairaroundyou.Thesurroundingsconsistofyour
bodyandthesuntheyprovidetheheatthatevaporatesthewaterdrops.
(c)Thewater,initiallyat25C,isthesystem.Thecontainerandtherestofthefreezercontents
includingtheairarethesurroundings.
(d)ThealuminumandFe2O3(s)mixtureisthesystem(initiallylateritconsistsofAl2O3(s)and
iron).Theflaskandthelaboratorybencharethesurroundings.
(a)Thevolumeofaballoonisastatefunction.
(b)ThetimeittakestodrivefromyourhometoyourcollegeoruniversityisNOTastate
function
(c)Thetemperatureofthewaterinacoffeecupisastatefunction.
(d)Thepotentialenergyofaballheldinyourhandisastatefunction.
333kJ
32.1kJ
0.16kJ
heatevolved=2.38kJ
56.3kJ
(a)molecularliquidBr2().
(b)metallicliquid,Hg().
(c)ionicsolidNa2SO4(s).
(dmolecularliquidCH3CH2OH().
(e)1molL1concentrationCl(aq).

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

27

7.17

7.19

7.20

7.21

(a)Thestandardenthalpychangeofthisreaction,rH,istheheatabsorbed(henceanegative
numberwhenisevolved)ataconstanttemperatureof25C,whenexactly1.00molofCO(g)
and0.500molofO2(g)bothgasesseparatelyat1barpressurearecombinedinavesselsuch
thatthetotalpressureis1bar(i.e.1thevesselcontainingthecarbonmonoxide),then
reactedcompletelyatfixedpressuretoform1molCO2(g)at1bar.
(b)Thestandardenthalpychangeofthisreaction,rH,istheheatabsorbedunderconstant
pressureconditionsof1bar,andconstanttemperatureat25C,whenexactly1.00molofMg(s)
and2.00molofH+(aq)at1.00molL1concentrationreactcompletelytoform1.00molof
Mg2+(aq)at1.00molL1concentrationand1molH2(g)at1barpartialpressure.
(c)Thestandardenthalpychangeofthisreaction,rH,istheheatabsorbedunderconstant
pressureconditionsof1bar,andconstanttemperatureat25C,whenexactly1.00molof
H+(aq)and1.00molofOH(aq)bothat1.00molL1concentrationreactcompletelytoform1.00
molofH2O().
(a)1.9kJ
116.8kJ
(a)Thestandardmolarenthalpyofformationofbromine,Br2(),isthestandardenthalpy
changeofthefollowingreaction:
Br2()Br2()at25C

(b)Thestandardmolarenthalpyofformationofsolidiron(iii)chloride,FeCl3(s),isthestandard
enthalpychangeofthefollowingreaction:
Fe(s)+Cl2(g)FeCl3(s)at25C

(c)Thestandardmolarenthalpyofformationofsolidsucrose,C12H22O11(s),isthestandard
enthalpychangeofthefollowingreaction:
12C(graphite)+11H2(g)+

7.22

Thestandardmolarenthalpyofformationofliquidmethanol,CH3OH(),isthestandard
enthalpychangeofthefollowingreaction:
C(graphite)+2H2(g)+

7.26

7.27
7.28

7.31

11
O2(g)C12H22O11(s)at25C
2

1
O2(g)CH3OH()at25C
2

3267.4KJ
53KJ
694KJ
(a)FALSE
(b)TRUE
(c)TRUE
(d)TRUE

28

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

REVIEWQUESTIONS

7.33

7.35

7.37

7.39

7.41

7.43

Theliquidwaterhasmoreenergy.
49.3kJ
181kJ
200kJ
6190kJ
23kJ

SUMMARYANDCONCEPTUALQUESTIONS

7.45

7.47

7.49

(a)H2O()
(b)NaCl(s)
(c)Hg()
(d)CH4(g)
(e)2.00molL1istheNa+(aq)concentration
90.3kJ
(a)601.24kJmol1
(b)1503.1kJ

7.51

905.47kJ

2 N2(g) + 6 H2(g) + 5 O2(g)


4 fH[NH3(g)]
|
4 NH3(g) + O2(g) |
|
|
| 4rH[NO(g)] + 6rH[H2O(g)]
4rH[NO(g)] + 6rH[H2O(g)] |
|
4rH[NH3(g)]
|
|

4 NO(g) + 6 H2O(g)

7.53

7.55

7.57

7.59

77.69kJ
rH=352.9kJ.MassofMg(s)=7.24mg.
Enthalpychangepergofhydrazine=16.67kJg1
Enthalpychangepergof1,1dimethylhydrazine=30.00kJg1
1,1dimethylhydrazineevolvesmoreheatonapergrambasis.

301kJ

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

29

7.61

7.63

7.65

(a)1070kJ
(b)1352.97kJ
1273kJ
(a)Anexothermicreactionreleasesenergywhichmustberemovedtoreturnthesystemtoits
originaltemperatureheatleavesthesystem.Anendothermicreactionabsorbsenergywhich
mustbesuppliedforthesystemtostayatitsoriginaltemperatureheatentersthesystem.

(b)Thesystemisthesetofallsubstancesofintereste.g.thereactantsandproductsofa
reaction.Thesurroundingsconsistofeverythingelse.

(c)Thespecificheatcapacityofsubstanceistheamountofheat(usuallyexpressedinJ)required
toraisethetemperatureofexactly1gofthesubstance1Cassumingnophasetransitions
occurduringheating.

(d)Astatefunctionisanythingthatdependsonlyonthestateofasystem.Astatefunctionis
anypropertyofthesystemsuchastemperature,pressure,volumeorenergy.Achangedvalue
ofastatefunctionindicatesachangeinthestateofthesystem.

(e)Thestandardstateofasubstanceisthestableformofthesubstanceat1atmandunless
specifiedotherwise25C.

(f)Theenthalpychangeofreaction,rH,isthechangeinenthalpywhentheextentofreactionis
1mol(i.e.reactantsformproductswithnumbersofmolesgivenbythestoichiometric
coefficients),andthetemperatureoftheproductsisreturnedtotheinitialtemperatureof
reactants.

(g)Thestandardenthalpychangeofreaction,rH,istheenthalpychangeofreactionunder
standardconditionsallreactantsandproductsareat1atmpressure,andsolutesareat1mol
L1concentration.

(h)Thestandardmolarenthalpychangeofformation,fH,isthestandardenthalpychangeofa
formationreactionwherein1molofasubstanceisformed.

7.67

7.69

7.71

7.73

30

Aperpetualmotionmachineisimpossibleassoonasthereisfrictionorotherformsofenergy
dissipation.Becauseenergyisconstantlylosttofriction,theremustbeaconstantsupplyof
incomingusefulenergyhereweinvokeconservationofenergy.Forthemachinetorun
forever,itmusthaveaninfinitesupplyofenergyimpossibleinafinitemachine.
rH=1433.5kJ
Abonddissociationenergyistheenthalpychangeassociatedwithbreakingasinglebond.All
bondbreakingprocessesareendothermictheenthalpychangeispositive.Italwaystakes
energyinputtobreakabond.
6.21010kJ

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

Chapter8

8.1

8.2

8.3

8.5

8.7

8.8

8.9

8.13

(a)Elementwithatomicnumber8greaterthanFi.e.atomicnumber=17isCl.
Elementwithatomicnumber18greaterthanCli.e.atomicnumber=35isBr.
Elementwithatomicnumber18greaterthanBri.e.atomicnumber=53isI.
Elementwithatomicnumber32greaterthanIi.e.atomicnumber=85isAt.
Theseareallhalogens.
(b)Theatomicnumbersofthegroup15elements,N,P,As,Sb&Bi,are
7,15,33,51and83
Differencesbetweensuccessiveatomicnumbers=
8,18,18and32.
(a)Strontium,Sr(s)
(b)Calcium,Ca(s)
(c)Rubidium,Rb(s)
(a)Bromine,Br2(g)
(b)Sodium,Na(s)
(c)Chlorine,Cl2(g)
(d)Theelementswithatomicnumbers34,35,36,37,and38areSe,Br,KrandRb.Rubidium,
Rb,isthemostpowerfulreducingagent.
C<Si<Al
(c)

(a)ThefourthionizationenergyofAlismuchlargerthanthethirdmoresothansuccessive
ionizationenergiesusuallyincrease.Afterremovingthreeelectronsfromanaluminumatom
theresultofthefirstthreeionizationstepstheatom(nowanion)isleftwiththeelectron
configurationofNe,anoblegas.Al3+hasfilledn=1andn=2shells.Thenextelectrontobe
removedisatightlyheldmemberofthesecondshell.Thefirstthreeelectronscamefromthe
thirdshell.
(b)Mg
(a)+2
(b)2

(a)Cl
(b)Ba2+
(c)K
(d)Se2
(e)Cl
(f)Pb2+

8.14

(a)O
(b)Cl

Li<Si<C<Ne

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

31

8.15

8.16

8.18

8.19

8.20

8.22

8.24

8.25

(a)O<C<Si
(b)Si<C<O
(c)Si<C<O
(a)1.46x105Jmol1=146kJmol1
(b)182KJmol1
2.043x1018J;308.3THz;97.24nm
2.2x1025nm

(a)valid
(b)notvalid
(c)notvalid
(a)0or1
(b)1,0or1
psubshell
(c)dsubshell
(d)lis0andmlhasthevalue0
(e)3orbitals
(f)7valuesofml
7orbitals
(a)n=4,l=2,ml=0,ms=0isnotvalidbecausemsisalwaysbecauses=
foranelectron.msisneverequaltozero.
(b)n=3,l=1,ml=3,ms=isnotvalidbecauseml=3doesnotgowithl=1.ml=1,0,or
1inthiscase.
(c)n=3,l=3,ml= 1,ms=+isnotvalidbecauselmustbelessthanorequalton1.

32

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

8.27

(a)

90% isosurface of 1s orbital


50% isosurface of 1s orbital

(b)

90% isosurface of 2s orbital


90% isosurface of 1s orbital

8.28

s obital 90% isosurface


x
p obital 90% isosurface

8.30 (a)18

(b)10

(c)1

(d)none

8.32 [Ne][][][][]
3s3p
Thelastfiveelectronscorrespondtothequantumnumbers,
n=3,
l=0andml=0,andms=or+ 2electronstates
l=1andml=1,0or1andms=+ 3electronstates

8.34 Z*(12Mg)=+2.85;Z*(15P)=+4.8;Z*(18Ar)=+6.75

8.35 Z*(8O)=+4.55;Z*(8O2)=+3.85

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

33

8.36

8.39

8.40

8.41

8.42

8.43

Although84Pohasalotmoreelectronsthan11Na,theelectronsofPoareheldsomuchmore
tightlythatitissmaller.Theeffectivenuclearcharges,+5.45and+2.2,showthateventhe
valenceelectronsofPoareheldmoretightlythanthevalenceelectronsofNa.Thevalence
electronsdeterminethesizeoftheatom.
Z*(Na)=+2.2;Z*(Si)=+4.15;Z*(Ar)=+6.75
Z*(N3)=+2.85;Z*(S3)=0.8
Ncanforma3ionbecausethevalenceelectronsarestillheldbyaneffectivenuclearchargeof
+2.85.Scannotformsuchanionbecauseitsvalenceelectronswouldberepelledbyanet
negativeeffectivenuclearcharge.AddinganelectrontoS2requiresputtingtheelectronina
newshellwhichiswellshieldedbythefilledshells.
Z*(Na+)=+6.85;Z*(Mg2+)=+7.85;Z*(Al3+)=+8.85
Thevalenceelectronsofthesethreeionsareincreasinglytightlyheld.Thisisconsistentwith
thetrendinsizestheionsdecreaseinsize.

Z*(Mg)=+2.5;Z*(Cl)=+5.75
ThelargereffectivenuclearchargeinClshowsthatchlorinehasagreaterattractionforan
additionalelectron.Thisisconsistentwithchlorinehavingalargerelectronegativity.
Z*(Ar)=+1.2
WeseethatArwillholdanextraelectronevenlesstightlythanMg.Argon,beinginert,hasno
electronegativity.Itselectronegativitycannotbedefinedsinceitformsnochemicalbonds.

REVIEWQUESTIONS
8.45

8.47

8.49

8.51

8.53

34

MgCl2isanionicmaterialacompoundofametalandnonmetal.Ithasahighmeltingpoint
i.e.,714Canditconductselectricityinitsmoltenstatebutnotitssolidstate.
PCl3isamolecularsubstanceacompoundoftwononmetals.Itssolidconsistsofmolecules
heldtogetherbyintermolecularforces.Ithasalowmeltingpointi.e.,112Canditdoesnot
conductelectricity.
C<B<Al<Na<K
K<Ca<Si<P
(a)S
(b)Cl
(a)C<B<Al
(b)Al<B<C
(c)carbon

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

8.55

8.59

8.61

8.63

8.65

(a)S<O<F
(b)O
(c)Cl
(d)O2
2.179x1018J
Blue;ninitial=6.
(a)10
(b)n=5toalevelwithn=1.
(c) n = 5 to the level with n = 4.
(a)n=4ton=2
(b)n=4ton=1

8.67 0.145nm

8.69
(a)

(b)

Thewavelengthofthiswaveis10cm.

Thewavelengthofthiswaveis5cm.

8.71

8.73

8.77

(c)Fourwavesfitintheintervalifthewavelengthofthestandingwaveis2.5cm.Thenumber
ofnodesbetweentheendsis241=7.

n=4,l=1andml=1,0,1
(a)n=2,l=2,ml=0isNOTallowedbecauselmustbenogreaterthan1whenn=2.
(b)n=3,l=0,ml=2isNOTallowedbecausemlmustequal0whenl=0.
(c)n=6,l=0,ml=1isNOTallowedbecausemlmustequal0whenl=0.
4

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

35

8.81

8.83

8.87

8.89

8.93

(a)Thenandlvaluesfor6s,4p,5d,and4fareasfollows:

6smeansn=6,l=0

4pmeansn=4,l=1

5dmeansn=5,l=2

4fmeansn=4,l=3
(b)Fora4porbitaltherearen1=3radialnodes(sphericalinshape)andl=1nodalplanes.
3+1=4altogether
Fora6dorbitaltherearen1=5radialnodes(sphericalinshape)andl=2nodalplanes(or
cones).5+2=7altogether
(a)energy
(b)quantumnumberl
(c)more
(d)7
(e)1
(f)0,1,2,3and4
(e)1+3+5+7=16
(a)1s22s22p63s23p4
(b)1s22s22p63s23p1
(a)1s22s22p63s23p64s23d104p3or[Ar]4s23d104p3
(b) 1s22s22p63s23p64s23d104p6 or [Ar]4s23d104p6 = [Kr]
(i)Z*(Mg)=+2.85
(ii))Z*(Mg+)=+3.2
(iii)Z*(Mg2+)=+7.85
Theincreasingeffectivenuclearchargeforthesethreespeciescorrelateswiththeirsizes:Mg>
Mg+>Mg2+.Note,especiallythejumpfromMg+toMg2+.

8.95

Z*(N3)=+2.85;Z*(O2)=+3.85;Z*(F)=+4.85

Theseeffectivenuclearchargescorrelatewiththerelativesizesoftheions:F<O2<N3

SUMMARYANDCONCEPTUALQUESTIONS

8.97

8.99

(c)Electronsaremovingfromagivenenergyleveltooneoflowern.
Electronsandothersubatomicparticlesarefoundtoexhibitpropertiesofbothwavesand
particles.Wecanmeasurethepositionoftheparticlesaparticleproperty.However,the
resultsofsuchmeasurementscanshowinterferencepatternscharacteristicofawave.

36

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

8.101 Li+ionsaresomuchsmallerthanLiatomsbecauseLihasalonevalenceelectroninthen=2
shell,whereasLi +justhasthetwon=1electrons.Inanycase,withanetpositivecharge,
cationsholdontotheirelectronsmoretightly,andarecorrespondinglymuchsmaller.
FionsaresomuchlargerthanFatoms,becausetheyareanions.Anions,withanetnegative
chargeholdontotheirelectronsmoreloosely,andaremuchlargerthanassociatedneutral
atoms.

8.103 Theionizationenergyofatomsincreasesfromlefttorightacrosstheperiodictable,and
decreasesgoingdownagroup.Thedecreasegoingdownagroupisattributabletothevalence
electronsbeingfurtherfromthenucleus.Theeffectivenuclearchargeisthesame(orsimilar)
becausetheelementsareinthesamegroup.Whatchangesisthedistancefromthenucleus.
Electronsfurtherfromthenucleusaremoreeasilyremoved.

Chapter9

9.1

9.2

9.3

9.4

9.5

Thespectraontheleftandrightarethoseofdiethyletherandbutan1ol,respectively.
Onecoulddistinguishbutan1olanddiethyletherbylookingforthedistinctiveOHstretch
peak(broadpeakaround32003550cm1)ofbutan1olintheIRspectra.
Thespectraontherightandleftarethoseofpropan2amineandpropan1amine,respectively.
(a)1
(b)4
(c)3
(d)7
(a)1peakinbothcarbon13andprotonspectra
(b)1peakinbothcarbon13andprotonspectra
(c)2peaksinbothcarbon13andprotonspectra
(d)1peakinbothcarbon13andprotonspectra
(e)1peakinbothcarbon13andprotonspectra
(f)1peakinbothcarbon13andprotonspectra
(g)2peaksinbothcarbon13andprotonspectra
(h)2peaksinbothcarbon13andprotonspectra
(i)2peaksincarbon13spectrumand1peakinprotonspectrum

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

37

9.6

H
CH3
H
H

H
H
H
H

HH

9.7

HH

Thisistheeclipsedconformationitistheleaststable.

CH3

CH3

H
H

CH3

H
H

H
H

CH3

CH3

CH3
H

H
H

H
H
H
H
ThesearetheNewmanprojectionsofthethreestaggeredconformations.Theconformationon
thelefthasthelowestenergy.Theothertwohavethesameenergy.

CH CH3
H H3
H
H
H
H

HH

9.8

HH

HH

HCH
3
H

H
H
H
H

ThesearetheNewmanprojectionsofthethreeeclipsedconformations.Theconformationon
thelefthasthehighestenergy.Theothertwohavethesameenergy.
Thereisonlyonestaggeredandoneeclipsedconformationofpropane.

H
H
H

38

H
CH3
H
H
CH
H H 3

HH

H
CH3
H
H

H
H

CH3

HCH3
H
H

HH

H
H
H
H

HH
H

Forethaneandbutane,theenergyasafunctionofangleofrotationabouttheCCbond(the23
bondinbutane)lookslike

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

9.10

9.14

energyvs.angleforethane

energyvs.angleforbutane

(a)C5H5N:oneHatomisbondedtoeachCatom
(b)C6H12O:twoHatomsarebondedtoeachCatom,excepttheC=Ocarbon
(c)C8H6NH:oneHatomisbondedtoeachCatom,exceptthetwoCatomsbelongingtoboth
rings

H3C

CH3

9.15

H
H

9.17

9.18

9.21

Br

Br

H
H

H
H

H
H

Herearetheequatorial(ontheleft)bromineandaxialbromineconformationsof
bromocyclohexane.Theequatorialpositionsarecircled.

Since[]D=16ispositiveforcocaine,cocaineistermeddextrorotatory.
16.1
(a)
(b)
(c)

Br>CH2CH2OH>CH2CH3>H
OH>CO2CH3>CO2H>CH2OH
Br>Cl>CH2Br>CH2Cl

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

39

9.22

9.23

9.24

9.25

9.26

9.27

9.28

Atthecarbonstereocenter,theconfigurationsare(a)S,(b)Sand(c)R

Atthetopandbottom(respectively)carbonstereocenter,theconfigurationsare(a)RandR
(b)SandR,and(c)RandS
Atthetopandbottom(respectively)carbonstereocenter,theconfigurationsare
RandR
(a)isamesocompound
(b)isamesocompound
(a)and(c)aremesomoleculestheyareR,S.
(b)isanR,Renantiomer.
Nandrolonehas6stereocenters.Therecouldinprinciplebeasmanyas26=64different
stereoisomers.
Darvonisthe2R,3S(+)enantiomerofpropoxyphene.
Novradisthe2S,3R()enantiomer.

40

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

REVIEWQUESTIONS
9.29

(a)
H
|
CH3CH2C=CCH2CH2CH3
|
H

(b)
CH3CHCH2 CH2 CH3
|
CH3

(c)

O
||
CH3CHCH
|
CH3

9.31

9.33

NMRusesphotonswithlowerenergythanthoseusedinIRspectroscopy.400MHzisamuch
lowerfrequencythanthe10100THzrangeofIRspectroscopy.NMRcausestransitions
betweenspinenergylevelsthatareveryclose.IRcausesvibrationalenergytransitionsthatare
muchhigherinenergy.
Reasonablevaluesforthecarbonatomchemicalshiftsareasfollows:
carbonylcarbonat200ppm
twomethylcarbonsataround20ppmtwodistinctpeaks
twomethylcarbonsataround20ppmtwodistinctpeaks
COmethylenecarbonat70ppm
CClmethinecarbonat50ppm

Thecarbon13spectrummightlooksomethinglike
|
|
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
____________|___________________________________|_____|_______|_|_____
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
240 220 200 180 160 140 120 100
80
60 40
20
0

9.35

9.37

(a)77.23ppmdownfieldfromTMS
(b)46338HzdownfieldfromTMS
(c)77.23
CH4<CH2Cl2<HCCH<benzene<HC(O)C(O)H(twocarbonylsbondedtogether)

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

41

9.39

9.41

Possibleskeletalstructures:
(a)
C4H8

(b)

C3H6O

(c)

C4H9Cl

CH3

H
H
H

H
H

CH3

CH3

H
H

H
CH3 H CH3

CH3

H
H

Thestaggeredconformationontheleftisexpectedtohavethelowerenergybecausethe
methylsubstituentonthebackcarbonisclosetobothofthemethylsubstituentsonthefront
carbonintherightconformation,butonlyoneintheleftconformation.

9.43

7.4kJmol1

9.45

42

cisandtrans2butene

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

9.47

H
Cl

Cl

Cl
H

9.49

9.51

Cl
EitherbothClatomsareequatorial(topconformation)oraxial(bottomconformation)because
onadjacentcarbonatomsthetwoaxialpositionsareonoppositesidesoftheringthetwo
equatorialarenecessarilyalsoonoppositesidesofthering.
Intheringflippedform,theblueandredsubstituentsareaxialwhereastheyellowisequatorial.

9.53

9.55

CH3 CH3
H

Themethylgroupsareinequatorialpositions.
Themethylsubstituenthasgreaterstericrequirementsthantheelectronlonepairtheformer
isinthemoreaccommodatingequatorialposition.

H3C
H3C

CH3

CH3
H3C
H3C

OH

OH

H
OH

H
CH3

H3C
H3C

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43

9.57

9.59

9.61

9.63

37.0O

(a)

(b)

9.65

1 SO3H

2 SH

3 OCH2CH2OH

4NH2

Theconfigurationsatthechiralcentersare:
(a)S (b)S (c)S

44

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

9.67

9.69

9.71

Thespecificrotationsof(2R,3R)dihydroxypentaneand(2S,3S)dihydroxypentanearethesame
(notequaltozero)exceptforthesign.Thesespeciesareenantiomers.Thespecificrotationof
(2R,3R)dihydroxypentaneiszeroitisamesocompound.
Thestereochemicalconfigurationsofthetwodiastereomersof(2S,4R)dibromooctaneare
(2R,4R)and(2S,4S).

H H

H OH

HO

9.73

O
HO

H HO H

Ribosethreestereocentersindicatedwithcircles.Theare23=8stereoisomersofribose.

H OH

H H
HO

9.75

O
H

OHHO H

(a)ThelonestereocenteristheCatombondedtotheNatomofthebicyclicsubstituent.
(b)ThestructureontherightistheSenantiomertheRenantiomeristhestructureontheleft.

SUMMARYANDCONCEPTUALQUESTIONS

9.77

9.79

NH2

Br

H
H

H
H H H
H

Br

Br

H
H

H
H Br H
H

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45

9.81

CH3

H
H

H H H
H

CH3

CH3 H3C

H H H
H

H
H

Thetwoenantiomersoftrans1,2dimethylcyclopentanetheyarethenonsuperimposable
mirrorimagesofeachother.

9.83

9.85

9.87

Thestereocentersaredenotedbysolidwhitecircles.
+6.83
CH3

H
H

H H H
H

H
CH3

H
H

CH3
H
H

CH3H

CH3

H
H

H H H
H

CH3
H

Thestereoisomersof1,2dimethylcyclopentane.Fromlefttoright,thestereocentersare
configuredas(R,R),(S,S)and(R,S).
Thetwoontheleft(thetransisomers)areenantiomers.Thestructureoftheright(thecis
isomer)isamesomolecule.

9.89

9.91

9.93

46

(a)ThechiralcarbonherehastheSconfiguration.
(b)BothofthechiralcarbonsherehavetheSconfigurations.
(a)(S)5Chloro2hexeneandchlorocyclohexanearestructuralorconstitutionalisomers.
Specifically,theyareskeletalisomers.
(b)(2R,3R)Dibromopentaneand(2S,3R)dibromopentanearediastereomers.
Thestereocenter(thetopcarbonintheprojection)isintheSconfiguration.

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

Chapter10

10.3

NH4+

N
H

H
H

CO

SO42

OH
S

HO

10.4

OH

HO

CH3OH

NH2OH

H
O

C
H

10.5

N
H
H

O
H

H
O
P
O

10.6

O
O

(a)Acetylideion,C22,isisoelectronicwithN2.
(b)SO2
(c)OH

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47

10.9

Thethreeresonancestructuresofnitrate,NO3

O
N
O

Astructurefornitricacid,HNO3

10.11

H
O

10.12

O
H

O
O

O
O

O
H

O
O

Thestructureontheright,withnoformalcharges,isthepreferredLewisstructure.

O
O

Equivalentresonancestructuresthattogetherbestdescribethechargedistributionwithin
ozone.

10.13

H
C

Cl

H
Cl

48

Tetrahedralshape.TheClCClbondangleispredictedtobe109.5

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

10.16

B
F

10.17

BF3

F
F
BF4

BF3istrigonalplanar.BF4istetrahedral.

(a)phosphateion, PO43, istetrahedral

P
O

O
O

(b)phosphoricacidmolecule, H3PO4, istetrahedralattheP

P
O

O
O

(c)sulfateion, SO42, istetrahedral

S
O

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

49

(d)sulfiteion,SO32,istrigonalpyramidal

(e)ethanolistetrahedralatthecarbonsandbentattheoxygen

H
C
H

H
C

(f)Acetone,CH3C(O)CH3,istrigonalplanaratthecarbonylcarbonandtetrahedralatthemethyl
carbons.
O
H

H
C
H

10.18

C
H

H
O
H

H
H

H
H

(a) (b)

Lewisstructuresof(a)hydroniumion,and(b)methylamine

(a)TheOatomofhydroniumhasfourelectronregionsdistributedtetrahedrally.Thismeans
sp3hybridizationatO.Threeofthesp3orbitalsoverlapwithsorbitalsonHatomstoformthe
OHbonds,whilethefourthaccommodatesthelonepaironO.
(b)TheCatomhasfourelectronregionsdistributedtetrahedrally.Thismeanssp3
hybridizationatC.Threeofthesp3orbitalsoverlapwithsorbitalsonHatomstoformtheCH
bonds,whilethefourthmakesabondwiththeNatom.

50

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

TheNatomhasfourelectronregionsdistributedtetrahedrally.Consequently,wehavesp3
hybridizationatN.Twoofthesp3orbitalsoverlapwithsorbitalsonHatomstoformtheNH
bonds,oneofthemformsthebondwithcarbon,whilethefourthaccommodatesthelonepair
onN.

10.19
O
H

H
C
H

C
H

ThemethylCatomshavethetetrahedraldistributionofelectronregions.Thismeanssp3
hybridizationatthemethylcarbonatoms.Threeofthesp3orbitalsoverlapwithsorbitalsonH
atomstoformtheCHbonds,whilethefourthmakesabondwiththecarbonylCatom.

ThecarbonylCatomhasatrigonalplanararrangementofelectronregionsconsequently,we
usesp2hybridizationhere.TheCCbondsareformedfromcarbonylcarbonsp2orbitals,and
methylcarbonsp3orbitals.Theremainingsp2orbitalformsthebondtooxygen.

Theoxygenatomhasthreeelectronregionsthetrigonalplanararrangementasdepicted
above.ThisOatomusesonesp2orbitaltomakethebondtoC.Theremainingtwosp2
orbitalsaccommodatelonepairs.

TheC=Odoublebondisformedfromtheunhybridizedporbitalsoneachatombothatomsare
sp2hybridizedwithoneunhybridizedporbital.ThisppbondistheCObond.

10.20

TheNatomshavealineararrangementoftwoelectronregions.Thismeanssphybridization.
AnsporbitalfromeachNatomisusedtomaketheNNbond.Theremainingsporbitals
accommodatethelonepairsoneoneachatom.

ThetworemainingporbitalsoneachatomoverlapinpairstoformthetwoNNbonds.
Specifically,thepxorbitalsoverlaptoformthexbond,whilethepyorbitalsoverlaptoformthe
ybond.

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

51

10.21

H
C

H
H

TheHCH,HCC,andCCNbondanglesareestimatedtobe109.5,109.5and180,
respectively.

ThemethylCatomhasthetetrahedraldistributionofelectronregionssp3hybridizationatthe
methylcarbonatoms.

ThenitrileCandNatomshavealineararrangementoftwoelectronregions.

ThetworemainingporbitalsonthenitrileCandNatomsoverlapinpairstoformthetwoCN
bonds.

10.22
O
H
C
H

52

ThemethylCatomhasthetetrahedraldistributionofelectronregionssp3hybridizationatthe
methylcarbonatoms.Threeofthesp3orbitalsoverlapwithsorbitalsonHatomstoformtheC
Hbonds,whilethefourthmakesabondwiththecarbonateCatom.

ThecarbonateCatomhasatrigonalplanararrangementofelectronregionssp2hybridization
here.TheCCbondisformedfromoneofthesesp2orbitals,andamethylcarbonsp3orbital.
Theremainingtwosp2orbitalsformbondstooxygenatoms.

Theoxygenatomscanbedescribedassporsp2hybridized.Becauseofsymmetry,weshouldto
usethesamedescriptionforbothatomsincontrasttotheLewisstructurewhichimpliesthat
oneoftheOatomsissp3hybridized.WewillassumesphybridizedOatoms.EachOatomuses
onesporbitaltomakeabondtoC.Theothersporbitaloneachatomaccommodatesalone
pair.Theotherlonepair,oneachOatom,occupiesoneofthetwounhybridizedporbitals.

WhatremainsareaporbitaloneachoftheOatomsandtheunhybridizedporbitalonthe
carbonatecarbonatomthreeorbitalsinall.Twoelectronpairsalsoremain.Inavalencebond
description,abondisformedusingtheporbitalonCandoneoftheOatomporbitals.The
otherOatomporbitalaccommodatestheremaininglonepairofelectrons.Thiscanbewritten
inoneoftwoequivalentwaystheresonancestructuresofcarbonate.However,becauseof
symmetryitismoreaccuratetothinkoftheporbitalonCandbothoftheOatomporbitals

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

formingadelocalizedbond,thoughthisgoesbeyondvalencebondtheory.Wemustthinkof
thetwoOatomporbitalsbeingcombinedtoformtwodelocalized(overthetwoOatoms)
orbitalsanalogoustoorbitalhybridizationexceptthattheorbitalsareondifferentatoms
(thesearemolecularorbitals).Oneofthedelocalizedorbitalsformsasymmetricbondwith
carbon,theotheraccommodatestheremaininglonepairofelectrons.

10.25 H2+:( 1s )1
He2:( 1s )2( 1s* )1
H2:( 1s )2( 1s* )1

H2+hasabondorderof.Itshouldexist.But,itisweaklybound.He2andH2havethesame
bondorder.

10.26 Li2anionshouldexist.Itisweaklyboundwithbondorder,.

10.27 ElectronconfigurationofgroundstateO2+
[core electrons]( 2 s ) 2 ( 2s ) 2 ( 2p y ) 2 ( 2pz ) 2 ( 2px ) 2 ( 2p y )1
Bondorder=2
O2+isexpectedtobeparamagnetic.Itselectronconfigurationshowsanunpairedelectron.

REVIEWQUESTIONS

10.31 4

10.33
(a)

(b)

N
F

Cl
O

Br

(d)

S
O

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(c)

53

10.35

10.37
(a)SO2

S
O

S
O

(b)NO2

N
O

N
O

(c)SCN

10.39

O
O

AverageCObondorder=3/2

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Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

10.41

(a)
+

FormalchargesarezeroonOsand+1onN.

(b)

N
O

N
O

TheNhasaformalchargeofzero.TheformalchargesonthetwoequivalentOsarezeroand
1.

(c)

N
F

F
F

Allatomshavezeroformalcharge.

(d)

O
N

Formalchargesareasshown.

10.43

N
O

N
O

IfHattachestoNO2(toformtheacidHNO2),itattachestoanOatomnotN.

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55

10.45

(a)

Therearetwoelectronregionsaboutthecarbonatom.Theelectrongeometryandthe
moleculargeometryarelinear.

(b)

N
O

N
O

Therearethreeelectronregionsaboutthenitrogenatom.Theelectrongeometryistrigonal
planar,whilethemoleculargeometryisbentthereisonelonepaironthecentralatom.

(c)

O
O

Therearethreeelectronregionsabouttheoxygenatom.Theelectrongeometryistrigonal
planar,whilethemoleculargeometryisbentthereisonelonepaironthecentralatom.This
moleculeisisoelectronicwithNO2.TheyhavethesameshapeandLewisstructureasidefrom
theformalchargeonthecentralatom.

(d)

Cl
O

Therearefourelectronregionsabouttheoxygenatom.Theelectrongeometryistetrahedral,
whilethemoleculargeometryisbenttherearetwolonepairsonthecentralatom.This
moleculeislikelymorebentthanO3orNO2,becausetherearetwolonepairsonthecentral
atominthiscase.

10.47 (1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)

120

109.5
120
109.5(actuallythevalueis107theangleissmallerduetogreaterrepulsionofthe
lonepairs)

109.5(actuallyslightlyless)

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Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

10.49

N
F

F
F

Themoleculargeometryistrigonalpyramidalthereisalonepairwhiletheelectron
geometryabouttheNatomistetrahedral.
Atetrahedraldistributionofelectronregionsmeanssp3hybridizationatnitrogen.Threeofthe
sp3orbitalsoverlapwithsporbitalsonFatomsweassumetheFatomstobesphybridized(in
contrasttotheLewisstructuredepictionwhichimpliessp3hybridization).Theremaining
nitrogensp3orbitalaccommodatesthelonepaironN.Theremainingonespandtwoporbitals
oneachFaccommodatesthefluorinelonepairsthreeoneachatom.

10.51 (a)Thecarbonatomsindimethylether,H3COCH3
usesp3hybridizedorbitalstoformbondswithHatoms,andwiththeOatom.
Theoxygenatomindimethylether,H3COCH3usestwosp3hybridizedorbitalstoformbonds
withCatoms.
Theremainingtwosp3orbitalsonOaccommodatethetwolonepairs.

10.53
(a) SO2
TheOSObondangleisabout120.
Thesulfuratomusessp2orbitalstoformtwobondsonewitheachOatom.
Theothersp2orbitalaccommodatesalonepair.WecandescribetheLewis
structurewithonlyonedoubleSObondwiththeremainingunhybridizedp
orbital.ItformsabondwithjustoneoftheOatoms.
However,thestructurewithtwoSOdoublebondsminimizesformalchargesand,
assuch,ispreferred.Todescribethebondinginthiscaserequirestheuseofa1
dorbitalonSsinceinthisstructure,Saccommodates10electronsinitsvalence
shell.TwopdorbitalsonSformtwobondsonewitheachoftheOatoms.

(b) SO3
TheOSObondangleis120.
Thesulfuratomusessp2orbitalstoformthreebondsonewitheachOatom.
Inaccordwiththeformalchargeminimizedstructure,weusethreepd2orbitals
onStoformthreebondsonewitheachoftheOatoms.Otherwise,ifweuse
justtheporbital,thenScanformonlyoneSObond.

(c) SO32
TheOSObondangleis109.5.
Thesulfuratomusessp3orbitalstoformthreebondsonewitheachOatom.
Theothersp3orbitalaccommodatesalonepaironS.
Inaccordwiththeformalchargeminimizedstructure,weusetwopdorbitalsonS
toformtwobondsonewitheachoftwoOatoms.

(d) SO42
TheOSObondangleis109.5.
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57

Thesulfuratomusessp3orbitalstoformfourbondsonewitheachOatom.
Inaccordwiththeformalchargeminimizedstructure,weusetwopdorbitalsonS
toformtwobondsonewitheachoftwoOatoms.

10.55 InlinearCO2thecarbonatomusestwosporbitalstoformbondswitheachOatom.Eachof
thetwounhydridizedporbitalsformsabondwithanOatom.InCO32,therearetwosingleC
ObondsandonedoubleCObond,givingrisetothreeequivalentresonancestructures.The
carbonatomusesthreesp2orbitalstoformbondswitheachofthethreeOatoms.The
unhydridizedporbitalformsabondwithjustoneOatom.Sinceitcanbeanyoneofthe
three,wegetthreeequivalentresonancestructures.

10.57 (a)TheanglesA,B,C,andDareabout120,109.5(actually104),109.5and120,
respectively.
(b)Accordingtothevalencebondmodel,carbonatoms1,2,and3aresp2,sp2andsp3
hybridized,respectively.

10.59

(a)

ThebondorderinO22is1.
(b) The molecular orbital theory electron configuration for O22 is (using unhybridized orbitals)

[core electrons]( 2 s ) 2 ( 2s ) 2 ( 2p y )2 ( 2pz ) 2 ( 2px ) 2 ( 2p y ) 2 ( 2pz ) 2

bond order = ( 2 + 2 + 2 + 2 2 2 2 ) = 1

(c)ForO22,thevalencebonddescriptionandthemolecularorbitaldescriptionpredictthesame
bondorderandthesamemagneticbehaviour(i.e.diamagneticNOTparamagneticthereare
nounpairedelectronsineitherdescription).

10.61 Molecularorbital;theoryelectronconfigurations(coreelectronsomitted):
(a)NO
( 2 s ) 2 ( 2s ) 2 ( 2p y ) 2 ( 2pz ) 2 ( 2px ) 2 ( 2p y )1
anunpairedelectronparamagnetic
HOMO= 2p y or 2pz sameenergy(bysymmetry)

(b)OF

( 2 s ) 2 ( 2s ) 2 ( 2p y ) 2 ( 2pz ) 2 ( 2px ) 2 ( 2p y ) 2 ( 2pz ) 2


nounpairedelectronsNOTparamagnetici.e.diamagnetic
HOMO= 2p y or 2pz sameenergy(bysymmetry)

(c)O22

( 2 s ) 2 ( 2s ) 2 ( 2p y ) 2 ( 2pz ) 2 ( 2px ) 2 ( 2p y ) 2 ( 2pz ) 2

nounpairedelectronsNOTparamagnetici.e.diamagnetic
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Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

HOMO= 2p y or 2pz sameenergy(bysymmetry)

(d)Ne2

( 2 s ) 2 ( 2s ) 2 ( 2p y ) 2 ( 2pz ) 2 ( 2px ) 2 ( 2p y ) 2 ( 2pz ) 2 ( 2px )1

anunpairedelectronparamagnetic
HOMO= 2px
(e)CN

( 2 s ) 2 ( 2s ) 2 ( 2p y ) 2 ( 2pz ) 2 ( 2px )1
anunpairedelectronparamagnetic
HOMO= 2px

SUMMARYANDCONCEPTUALQUESTIONS

10.63

N
F

F
F

NF3hasfourelectronpairsaboutthecentralatom,andatrigonalpyramidalshape.

O
Cl

Cl

OCl2hasfourelectronpairsaboutthecentralatom,andabentshape.

10.65 TheaverageCObondorderinformate(HCO2is1.5therearetwoequivalentCObonds
representedasasingleandadoublebondinthetworesonancestructures.
Inmethanol(CH3OH),theCObondisjustasinglebondthereisjustonestructure.
Incarbonate(CO32),therearethreeequivalentCObonds.Oneisadoublebond,whilethe
othertwoaresinglebonds.Theaveragebondorderis4/3=1.3333.
FormatehasthestrongestCObond,whichisexpectedtobetheshortest.
MethanolhastheweakestCObond,whichisexpectedtobethelongest.

10.67 NO 2 islinear.ItsONObondangleis180.
NO 2 isbent.ItsONObondangleislessthan120.

10.69 (a)Angles1,2,and3equalabout120,180and120,respectively.
(b)Thecarboncarbondoublebondisshorter.
(c)Thecarboncarbondoublebondisstronger.
(d)TheCNtriplebondisthemostpolarlargestdifferenceinelectronegativity.

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59

10.71 (a)Bondangles1,2and3areabout120,109.5(actually104)and120,respectively.
(b)TheshortestcarbonoxygenbondisthecarbonylC=Odoublebondatthetopofthe
structure.
(c)ThemostpolarbondinthemoleculeistheOHbondatthebottomofthestructure.

10.73 (a)ThegeometryabouttheboronatominH3NBF3istetrahedral.
(b)InBF3,thevalenceorbitalsofboronaresp2hybridized.
InH3NBF3,thevalenceorbitalsofboronaresp3hybridized.
(c)Weexpectthehybridizationofborontochangewhenthiscoordinatebondforms.

Chapter11

11.4

11.5

11.6

11.10

11.13

11.16

11.17

11.19

11.23

32x104L
650balloons
136kPa
121gmol1
p(C2HBrClF3)=37.7kPa
P(O2)=364kPa
0.798
TakingHeasthereference,RateofeffusionofSF6

RateofeffusionofHe
andRateofeffusionofN2
RateofeffusionofHe

=0.166

=0.378

160gmol1
(a)thedispersionforcesinliquidO2<(c)thedipoleinduceddipoleinteractionsofO2
dissolvedinH2O<(b)thehydrogenbondingforcesinliquidCH3OH

11.25 (a)167mmHg
(b)thevapourandliquidareNOTatequilibriumthevapourissupersaturatedandvapour
condensestoformmoreliquid.

11.26 0.50gofwaterisnotenoughtoachieveapartialpressureof19.3kPa.Instead,weachieveonly
15kPa.

With2.0gofwater,thepartialpressureofwaterwouldbe19.3kPa.

60

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

11.27

11.29

(a)ThedensityofliquidCO2islessthanthatofsolidCO2.
(b)gasphase
(c)No.
T(80km)<T(25km)<T(110km)<T(5km)

REVIEWQUESTIONS

11.29 T(80km)<T(25km)<T(110km)<T(5km)

11.31 Thetemperaturestopsdecreasing,andstartsincreasing,aswemovefromthetroposphereinto
thestratosphere.AbsorptionofUVlightbyoxygenproducesoxygenatomswhich,inturn,
produceozone(togetherwithotheroxygenmolecules).Theozoneproduceabsorbsadditional
UVlight.Theenergyabsorbedincreasesthelocaltemperature.Thedensityoftheatmosphere
atthetopofthestratosphereandbottomofmesosphereissufficienttoabsorbenoughUVlight
toincreasethetemperature.Aswedescendintothestratosphereandbelow,theintensityof
incomingUVradiationisdiminishedduetoabsorptionathigheraltitudes.At1kmabove
earthssurfaceinthetropospherethereistoolittleUVradiationtocausesignificantabsorption
byoxygentoproduceOatoms,andozoneetc.

11.33 (a)c(CO2)waslowerat30,000yearsagocomparedto125,000yearsago,thenwasloweragain
at260,000yearsago.
(b)Temperaturewaslowerat30,000yearsagocomparedto125,000yearsago,thenwaslower
againat260,000yearsago.

11.35 0.276atm=30.0kPa=0.300bar

11.37 0.117L

11.39 9.7atm

11.41 Molarvolume(at448.15Kand1.00bar)ofH2,CO2andSF6are37.277,37.218and37.157Lmol
1
,respectively.Thethreegasesaremorealikeintermsofmolarvolumeat448.15Kthan
298.15K.

11.43 565kPa

11.45 57.5gmol1

11.47 1.22x107L.Thoughthepressuredroppedbyalmost20%,thedecreaseintemperature
compensatesandthechangeinvolumeisnotverybig.Nevertheless,therewouldhavetobe
allowanceforexpansionoftheballoonathigheraltitudes.

11.49 33.97gmol1

11.51 173g
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61


11.53

11.55

11.61

11.63

171kPa
PTotal=580kPa
P(H2)=412kPa
P(Ar)=168kPa
3.65041cms1
4.58cms1
1.194

11.67 36gmol1

11.69 Usingidealgaslaw,p=4990kPa.UsingvanderWaalsequation,p=2991kPa.

11.71 WhensolidI2dissolvesinmethanol,CH3OH,dispersionforcesholdingI2moleculesintheir
latticepositionsmustbeovercome.Hydrogenbondingforcesbetweenmethanolmoleculesare
disruptedwhenmethanolsolvatesiodine.Thesolvationforcesbetweenmethanolandiodine
aredipoleinduceddipoleinteractions.

11.75 (a)18.7kPa

(b)Atabout75C

(c)Theequilibriumvapourpressureofethanolishigherthanthatofwaterat70C.

11.77 About80kPa.1.0gofdiethyletherismorethanenoughtoachievethispartialpressure.0.24g
ofdiethyletherevaporates,while0.76gremainsintheliquidphasethetwophasesarein
equilibrium.Iftheflaskisplacedinanicebath,thetemperaturelowerscausingthevapour
pressuretolower.Thegasbecomessupersaturatedandliquiddiethylethercondensesoutof
thevapour.

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Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

11.81
p/kPa

100
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90
T/K

Thisphasediagramisconstructedby(1)connecting(T=0K,p=0kPa)tothetriplepoint,(T=
54.34K,p=0.267kPa),togetthesolidgascoexistencecurve,(2)connectingthetriplepointto
thenormalmeltingpoint,(T=54.8K,p=100kPa),togetthesolidliquidcoexistencecurve,and
(3)connectingthetriplepointtothenormalboilingpoint,(T=90.18K,p=100kPa),togetthe
liquidgascoexistencecurve.
AtT=196C(i.e.T=77K),p=76.5kPa

11.83 1.624kJ

11.87 CH3Clcanbeliquefiedatoraboveroomtemperature,upto416K(143C)thecritical
temperature.Abovethecriticaltemperature,chloromethanecannotbeliquifieditcanonly
becompressedintoasupercriticalfluid.Belowthetriplepointtemperature,175.4K(97.8C),
chloromethanecannotbeliquifieditsolidifiesuponcompression.However,room
temperatureisbetweentheselimitsonliquification.

11.89 IceVonlyexistsovertherangeoftemperaturesandpressuresshowninthephasediagram.The
lowestpressureatwhichIceVisstableisabout3Mbari.e.about3millionatmospheres.

SUMMARYANDCONCEPTUALQUESTIONS

11.91 306K

11.93 (a)A1.0Lflaskcontaining10.0geachofO2andCO2at25ChasgreaterpartialpressureofO2
thanCO2.Thepartialpressuresdependonthenumbersofmoles10.0gofthelowermolar
massO2hasmoremolesthan10.0gofCO2.
(b)ThelighterO2moleculeshavegreateraveragespeedaveragespeedisproportionalto
M1/2.

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63

11.95 (a)ThisisNOTagas.Anidealgaswouldexpand100foldifitspressurewerechangedfrom100
barto1bar(atmosphericpressure).Onlyaliquidorsolidissoincompressibleastoexpandonly
10%whenrelievedofsuchalargepressure.

(b)ThisisNOTagas.Adensityof8.2gmL1=8200gL1iswaytoohighforsuchagas.
(c)Thereisinsufficientinformation.Chlorineisatransparentandpalegreengas.But,thereare
alsomanytransparentandpalegreenliquidsandsolids.
(d)Amaterialthatcontainsasmanymoleculesin1.0m3asthesamevolumeofair,atthesame
temperatureandpressure,isdefinitelyagas(assumingthetemperatureandpressurearenot
unusual).

11.97 (a)46.0g

(b)

11.99

Thestructureontheleftisthemostreasonable.

(c)Theazideionislinear.

0.61kPacorrespondstoessentiallyzeropressureinthegivenphasediagram.Tosolidifycarbon
dioxiderequiresatemperaturenogreaterthan90C.

11.101 (a) O 2 < B2 H 6 < H 2 O i.e.indescendingorderaccordingtomolarmass

(b)102.3kPa

11.103 64g

11.105 (a)28.7gmol1

(b)x(O2)=0.17;x(N2)=0.83

11.107 21.7kPa

11.109 (a)7.76mgL1

(b)4.61mgL1

Themassdensityofwatervapourishigherat20Cwith45%humiditythan0Cwith95%
humidity.

11.111 5.491019atoms/m3

11.113 Themoleculesofcookingoildonotformhydrogenbondswithwater,anddonothavestrong
dipolestoformsignificantdipoledipoleinteractions.

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Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

11.115

(a)27C

(b) At25C,thereisnetevaporationofliquidCCl2F2untilthe
dichlorodifluoromethanepartialpressureinsidethesteelcylinderequalsabout6.5
atm,thevapourpressureofCCl2F2at25C.Hereweassumethatthecylinderisnotso
bigthat25kgofCCl2F2isnotenoughtofillthecylindertothispressurei.e.nobigger
thanabout780L.

(c)TheCCl2F2vapourrushesoutofthecylinderquicklyatfirstbecauseofthelarge
pressure
imbalance.
Theflowslowsastheinsidepressureapproaches1atm.
Theoutsideofthecylinderbecomesicybecausewhenthegasexpands,
intermolecularforcesareovercometheenergyrequiredisdrawnfromthethermal
energyofthegasandcylinder.Expansionofagascancausesignificantcooling.This
expansionisdrivenbytheincreaseinentropy,andtheresultingcoolingisinexorable.

(d)
(1)Turningthecylinderupsidedown,andopeningthevalve,wouldproducea
dangeroussituation.Thecylinderwouldbehavelikearocket.Itwouldempty
quicklythough.
(2)Coolingthecylinderto78Cindryice,thenopeningthevalvewouldallow
thecylindertobeemptiedsafely.Itwouldnothappenquicklythoughthe
vapourpressureofCCl2F2at78C(notshowninthefigure)isquitesmall.
(3)Knockingthetopoffthecylinder,valveandall,withasledgehammerwould
providerapidandrelativelysafedischargeofthecylinder.Theflowvelocity
wouldbesmallerbecauseofthelargecrosssectionalareaoftheopentopof
thecylinder.

11.117 90.1kJ

11.119

(a)

O
+

H3N
O

NH

CH3

O
O

(b)Aspartameiscapableofhydrogenbonding.Sitesofhydrogenbondingarecircledonthe
structure.

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

65

Chapter12

12.2

12.4

12.5

(a)ThelatticeenthalpyofLiCl(s)islargerthanthatofKCl(s)becausetheLi+ionissmallerthan
K+andsogetsclosertoCl.Theelectrostaticpotentialenergyislowerittakesmoreenergyto
breaktheionicbonds.
(b)TheenthalpyofaquationofLi+andClislargerinmagnitudethanthatofK+andCl(theyare
bothnegative)becausetheLi+ionissmallerthanK+.TheinteractionofwatermoleculeswithLi+
isstrongerthanwithK+becausetheygetclosertothesmallerlithiumions.
1.12x102molL1
ThesolubilityofLi2SO4inwaterdecreasesslightlyasweincreasethetemperaturefrom10C.
TheamountofsolidLi2SO4inthesecondbeakerwillincreasealittle.

ThesolubilityofLiClinwaterincreasesslightlyasweincreasethetemperaturefrom10C.The
amountofsolidLiClinthefirstbeakerwilldecrease.

12.7

molefraction=0.00210
molality=0.117molkg1
masspercent=3.85%

12.8 19.85kPa

12.10 4.66kPa

12.12 Thefreezingpointofthesolutionis5.25C.Theaddedethyleneglycolisnotenoughto
preventfreezingat25C.

12.14 472gmol1

12.16 2.81C

12.18 1.40105gmol1

12.19 754kPa

12.20 (a)volume=4.19x106nm3

Surfacearea=1.26x105nm2

(b)2.4x1014spheres;surfacearea=30m2

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Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

REVIEWQUESTIONS

12.21 (a)6.20106molL1kPa1.
BecauseO2isagas,itislesssolubleinwaterathighertemperaturesdissolutionisan
exothermicprocess.

12.23 ForasaturatedNaClsolutionat25Cwithnosolidinthebeaker,theamountofdissolvedNaCl
inthesolutionisincreasedby
(c)RaisingthetemperatureofthesolutionandaddingsomeNaCl.
ThesolubilityofNaClinwaterincreaseswithtemperaturenotalot,butsome.
(a)AddingmoresolidNaCldoesnotincreaseNaClinsolutionbecausethesolutionissaturated.
(b)RaisingthetemperatureofthesolutiondoesnotincreaseNaClinsolutionbecausethereis
noextrasolidNaClinthebeakertodissolve.
(d)LoweringthetemperatureofthesolutionandaddingsomeNaCldecreasestheamountof
NaClinsolutionbecausethesolubilitygoesdown.

12.25 molefraction=0.000780

molality=0.0434molKg1

masspercent=0.509%

12.27 2.65g

12.29 5.65molkg1

12.31 (a)16.2molkg1

(b)37.1%

12.35 The0.15molkg1Na2SO4solutionhasthehigherequilibriumvapourpressureofwater.

12.37 (a)8.60molkg1

(b)28.4%

12.41 Inorderofdecreasingfreezingpoint,wehave
(a)0.20molkg1ethyleneglycolsolution
(d)0.12molkg1KBrsolution0.24molkg1ions
(c)0.10molkg1MgCl2solution0.30molkg1ions
(b)0.12molkg1K2SO4solution0.36molkg1ions
i.e.inorderofincreasingconcentrationofaquatedspecies

12.43 510g

12.45 52.9kPa

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67

SUMMARYANDCONCEPTUALQUESTIONS

Therearenosummaryandconceptualanswersnecessaryforthischapter.

Chapter13

13.3

(a) Q

[PCl3 ][Cl2 ]

[PCl5 ]

[CO]2

(b) Q
[CO 2 ]
[Cu 2+ ][NH 3 ]4

(c) Q
[Cu(NH 3 ) 24 ]
[CH 3COO ][H 3O + ]

(d) Q
[CH 3COOH]
13.5

13.6

13.7

13.10

13.11

13.13

(a)Qc=2.25.NOTatequilibrium.BecauseQc<Kc,thereactionproceedsintheforward
direction.
(b)Qc=3.47.NOTatequilibrium.BecauseQc>Kc,thereactionproceedsinthereversedirection
(a) [NH 3 ] 6.2 10-4 mol L1
(b)[NH3]=1.8x102molL1
Thecadmiumsolutionhasahigherammoniaconcentration
(a)[C6H10I2]=0.015molL1
[C6H10]=0.035molL1
(b)K=0.082
[H2]=[I2]=1.54103molL1
[HI]=8.92103molL1
(b) K 2 = K12
(a) K 2 ( K 2 ) 2 = (2.5 1029 ) 2 = 6.3 1058
(b) K 3 ( K 2 ) 1 = (6.3 1058 ) 1 = 1.6 1057

13.14 K 3 K1 K 2 8.12 0.771 13.7


2

13.15 [butane]=0.77molL1

[isobutane]=1.93molL1

68

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

13.16 (a)WhenextraH2isaddedtoanequilibriummixture,themixtureisshiftedoutofequilibrium
bytheincreaseinH2concentration.Thereisnetforwardreactionuntilanewequilibriumis
attained.Some,butnotall,oftheadditionalH2isconsumed.TheconcentrationofN2
decreases,sinceitisareactant,whiletheconcentrationofproductNH3increases.
WhenextraNH3isadded,netreversereactionfollowsconsumingsomebutnotallofthe
addedammonia.Thefinalequilibriummixturehasahigherconcentrationofbothhydrogenand
nitrogen(reactants)andahigherconcentrationofammoniathantheoriginalequilibrium
mixture.

(b)Whenthevolumeofthesystemisincreased,allconcentrationsaredecreasedbythesame
factor.Sincethereareadifferentnumberofmolesofreactantandproductgases,thiswill
changethevalueofthereactionquotient,shiftingitawayfromitsequilibriumvalue.Inthis
case,therearemorereactantgasesthanproductgases,andthereactionquotientgetsbigger.
Thiscausesthereactiontoproceedinthereversedirection(thereactionquotientmust
decreasetoreverttoitsequilibriumvalue),generatinganetincreaseinmolesofgas.The
reactionproceedsinthedirectionwhichcountersthedecreaseintotalgasconcentration
causedbythechangeinvolume.

13.17 (a)TheequilibriumconcentrationofNOCldecreasesifthetemperatureofthesystemis
increased.

2 NO(g) + Cl2 (g)


2 NOCl(g)

rxn H = +77.1 kJ mol-1

(i) Initially,themixtureisatequilibrium.So,Q=K.Whentemperatureincreases,the
equilibriumconstantgenerallychanges.Foranendothermicreactionsuchasthis,the
equilibriumconstantincreases.Now,Q<KwhereKisthenewequilibriumconstant.Q
hasnotchangedatleastatfirst.However,becauseQislessthanK,thereactionmust
proceedintheforwarddirectiontoreturntoequilibriumi.e.increasingQuptoK.This
directionconsumesreactanti.e.theconcentrationofNOCldecreases.
(ii) Thereactionproceedsintheforwardendothermicdirectionafterthetemperatureis
increased.Theendothermicdirectionisthedirectionthatconsumesheatandlowers
temperaturei.e.counteringtheincreaseintemperatureinaccordwithLeChateliers
principle.
(b)TheequilibriumconcentrationofSO3decreasesifthetemperatureisincreased?

2 SO3 (g)
2 SO 2 (g) + O 2 (g)
rxn H = -198 kJ mol-1

(i) Initially,themixtureisatequilibrium.So,Q=K.Foranexothermicreactionsuchasthis,
theequilibriumconstantdecreases.Now,Q>KwhereKisthenewequilibriumconstant.
Toreturntoequilibrium,Qmustdecreasei.e.thereactionproceedsinthereverse
directiontoreturntoequilibriumi.e.decreasingQdowntoK.
(ii) Thereactionproceedsinthereverseendothermicdirectionafterthetemperatureis
increased.Theendothermicdirectionisthedirectionthatconsumesheatandlowers
temperaturei.e.counteringtheincreaseintemperatureinaccordwithLeChateliers
principle.

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69

REVIEWQUESTIONS

13.19

13.21

13.25

13.29

13.31

13.33

13.35

13.37

13.39

13.41

BecauseQ(1.4x104)<K(4.0x104),thereactionproceedsintheforwarddirection
K=1.2
K=9.3x105
(a)K=1.6
(b)ThenewequilibriumconcentrationsofH2OandCOareboth0.014molL1
0.0002g
[NH3]eqm=0.66molL1
[N2]eqm=0.57molL1
[H2]eqm=1.71molL1
p=17.7MPa
4.441025
(a)K=0.041
(b)K=590
(a)[butane]=1.1molL1
[isobutane]=2.9molL1
(b)sameasinpart(a)
(a)Allthreegasesincreaseinconcentration.
(b)Allthreegasesincreaseinconcentration.
(c)Anetdecreaseinallgasconcentrations.
(d)Productgasesdecreaseinconcentration,whilereactantgasesincreaseinconcentration.

13.43 (a)(i)nonetreaction

(b)(ii)netreactiontoformmoreBaCO3(s)

(c)(i)nonetreaction
(d)(iii)netreactiontoformmoreBaO(s)andCO2(g).
(e)(iii)netreactiontoformmoreBaO(s)andCO2(g).

13.45 [PCl5]eqm=0.0198molL1
[PCl3]eqm=0.0232molL1
[Cl2]eqm=0.0404molL1

70

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

SUMMARYANDCONCEPTUALQUESTIONS

13.47

13.49

(a)81%
(b)Therewillbenetreactioninthereversedirection
(a)0.60
(b)0.50
(c)ThefractionsofSO2Cl2(g)dissociatedinpart(b)islessthanthatinpart(b),inagreementwith
LeChateliersprinciple.Therewasnetreactioninthereversedirectiontocountertheincrease
inchlorinegasconcentration.

Chapter14

14.1

(a)

HCOO aq + H 3O + aq
HCOOH aq + H 2 O(l)
acid base
conj.base
conj.Acid

(b)

NH 4 + aq + HS aq
NH 3 aq + H 2S aq
base acid
conj.acid conj.Base

14.3

SO 4 2 aq + H 2 O(l)
(c)
HSO 4 aq + OH aq
acid base
conj.baseconj.acid

HC2O4 (aq)actingasaBrnstedLowryacid:
C2 O 4 2 aq + H 2 O(l)
HC2 O 4 aq + OH aq

HC2O4(aq)actingasaBrnstedLowrybase:
H 2 C 2 O 4 aq + H 2 O(l)
HC2 O 4 aq + H 3O aq

14.5

14.7

14.9

14.10

14.12

[H3O+]=4.0103molL1
[OH]=2.5x1012molL1
(a)pOH=2.9;pH=11.1
(b)[H3O+]=4.79105molL1;[OH]=2.09x1010molL1
(c))pOH=3.54;[OH]=2.88x104molL1
(a)pKa=4.2
(b)aquatedchloroaceticacidisastrongeracidthanaquatedbenzoicacid
ItfitsbetweenbenzoicandaceticacidsinTable14.5.
Kb=7.1x1011
ItfitsbetweendihydrogenphosphateandfluorideinTable14.5.

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71

14.13

14.15

(a)AnaqueoussolutionofKBrhasapHof7.
(b)AnaqueoussolutionofNH4NO3hasapH<7
(c)AnaqueoussolutionofAlCl3hasapH<7
(d)AnaqueoussolutionofNa2HPO4haspH>7
(a)TheHattachedtoNhasthegreatestconcentrationofpositivecharge.Assuch,thisisthe
mostacidichydrogenatom.
(b)Theunprotonatedringnitrogenhasthegreatestconcentrationofnegativecharge.Itisthe
mostbasicnitrogenatominimidazole.

14.16 COaLewisbase.

14.17
(a)

(b)

H
C

H
C

H
H

LewisBase
(c)

Br

H
H

LewisBase

(d)

H
C

LewisBase

LewisAcid

(e)

(f)

H
C

Cl

H
H

P
C

Lewisbase,throughClatoms

C
H
H

LewisBase

14.19 Ka=6.87x105

14.22 [CH3COO]=[H3O+]=0.0013molL1
[CH3COOH]=0.0987molL1
pH=2.89
%aceticacidionized=1.3%

14.24 TheresultsshowninTable14.7arecorrect.

14.25 TheresultsshowninTable14.8arecorrect.

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Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

14.27 (a)0.30molL1aqueoussolutionofformicacid

pH=2.14;%ionisation=2.4%

0.10molL1aqueoussolutionofformicacid

pH=3.27;%ionisation=0.18%

(b)0.18%

14.28 [HOCl]=[OH]=6.6106molL1

pH=8.82

14.30 [oxalate]=[H3O+]=0.053molL1

pH=1.28

14.31 (a)Accordingtoincreasingacidity(i.e.decreasingpH)wehave
C<A<B

(b)accordingtoamountofNaOHthatcanbeconsumed,wehave
B(0.001molL1)<A(0.005molL1)<C(0.006molL1)

14.34 (a)2.88x103

(b)2.88

(c)2.88x103

14.35 (a)AtpH6.0
(i)1.33x104
(ii)16
(iii)2.78x106

AtpH=6.0,thedominantspeciesisH2PO4

(b)AtpH=9.0
(i)1.33x107
(ii)1.6x102
(iii)2.78x103

AtpH=9.0,thedominantspeciesisHPO42

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14.36 (a)phenylalanine

[H 3O + ]
[H 2 Phe+ ]
107.40
=
=
= 105.57 = 2.7 106
[HPhe]
K a1
101.83

[H 3O + ]
[HPhe]
107.40
=
=
= 101.73 = 54
[Phe ]
Ka 2
109.13

ThedominantspeciesatpH=7.40isHPhe.
O
+

NH3

(b)glutamicacid

[H 3Glu + ]
[H 3O + ]
107.40
=
=
= 105.21 = 6.2 106
2.19
[H 2 Glu]
K a1
10

[H 3O + ]
[H 2 Glu]
107.40
=
=
= 103.15 = 7.1104

4.25
[HGlu ]
Ka 2
10

[H 3O + ]
[HGlu ]
107.40
=
=
= 102.27 = 190
2
9.67
[Glu ]
K a3
10

ThedominantspeciesatpH=7.40isHGlu
O
O

O
+

NH3

(c)lysine

[H 3 Lys 2+ ]
[H 3O + ]
107.40
=
=
= 105.22 = 6.0 106
[H 2 Lys + ]
K a1
102.18

[H 3O + ]
[H 2 Lys + ]
107.40
=
=
= 101.55 = 35
8.95
[HLys]
Ka 2
10

[H 3O + ]
[HLys]
107.40
=
=
= 103.13 = 1350

10.53
[Lys ]
K a3
10

ThedominantspeciesatpH=7.40isH2Lys+
O

H3N

74

NH3

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

14.40 pH=4.13

14.42 (b)NH3andNH4ClwouldmakeabuffersolutionnearpH=9

14.43 Ifwepreparea(nottoodilute)solutionwitha2.0to1ratio(onamolesbasis)ofNa2HPO4(s)to
NaH2PO4(s),itwillfunctionasabuffersolutionwithpH=7.5.

14.45 (a)pH=3.89

(b)pH=3.86

14.46 (a)(i)pH=10.02

(ii)pH=10.2610.02=0.24

(b)(i)11.02

(ii)pH=11.3011.02=0.28

14.47 concentrationoftheaceticacidinvinegarsample=1.08molL1

massofaceticacidinvinegarsample=1.62g

14.49 0.119molL1

14.51

14.52

14.53

(a)4.47
(b)8.72
(a)4.19
(b)6.38
(c)9.19
(d)10.32
(e)11.13
1.049107molL1

REVIEWQUESTIONS

14.55 pH=2.12
[OH]=1.31012molL1

14.56 Kb=6.31x105

14.57 [H3O+]=10pH=103.75=1.78104molL1
Thesolutionisacidic(pH<7).

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75

14.59

K b CH 3 3 N aq =

[ CH 3 3 N]

1
= K a CH 3 3 NH +

Kw

14.61

[ CH 3 3 NH + ][OH ]

[ CH 3 3 N][H 3O ]

1
=

+
[ CH 3 NH ] [H 3O ][OH ]
3

Kw
K a CH 3 3 NH +

1014
1014
=
= 104.20 = 6.31 105
pK a
9.80
10
10

HPO42(aq)ionsactingasanacid:
PO 43 aq + H 3O (aq)
HPO 4 2 aq + H 2 O l
HPO42(aq)ionsactingasabase:
H 2 PO 4 aq + OH aq
HPO 4 2 aq + H 2 O(l)

14.63 (b)ClC6H4COOH(pKa2.88)isthestrongeracid,strongerthanbenzoicacid(pKa4.20).The
acidwiththelowestpKavalueisthestrongest.

14.65 (a)HCOOH(aq)(formicacid)isthestrongestacid.
C6H5OH(aq)(phenol)istheweakestacid.
(b)HCOOH(aq)(formicacid)hastheweakestconjugatebase.
(c)C6H5OH(aq)(phenol)hasthestrongestconjugatebase.

14.69 The0.10molL1solutionof(a)Na2S(s)hasthehighestpH.
The0.10molL1solutionof(f)AlCl3(s)hasthelowestpH.

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Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

14.71

(a)

trimethylphosphine,(CH3)3P,plusH3O+issimilartodimethylamine,(CH3)2NH,plusH3O+

(b)

14.73

14.75

14.77

BrdoesnotbehaveasaLewisacid

[H3O+]=1.58104molL1
(b)Ka=1.1x105(moderatelyweakacid)
(a)decreasespH
(b)increasespH
(c)NoaffectonthepH
[NH4+]=[OH]=1.6103molL1
[NH3]=0.015molL1
[H3O+]=6.25x1012molL1
pH=11.20
%NH3ionized=1.1%

11.79 (i)0.054%
(ii)0.17%
(iii)5.4%

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77

14.81 (a)[OH]=9.2105molL1

[N2H5+]=9.2105molL1

[N2H62+]=9.01016molL1

(b)pH=9.96

14.83 AtpH=3.00,[CH3NH2]/[CH3NH3+]=0.42

AtpH=7.00,[CH3NH2]/[CH3NH3+]=4200

AtpH=11.00,[CH3NH2]/[CH3NH3+]=4.2x107

WhenpH=pKa=3.38,[CH3NH2]=[CH3NH3+]

14.85 (a)At
(i)pH=6,H2A(aq)hasthehighestconcentration
(ii)pH=8,HA(aq)hasthehighestconcentration
(iii)pH=10,HA(aq)stillhasthehighestconcentrationbutnotbyaswideamargin

(b)pKa1andpKa2canbeseenintheplot.
[H2A(aq)]=[HA(aq)]whenpH=pKa1
So,pKa1=about6.4
[HA(aq)]=[A2(aq)]whenpH=pKa2
So,pKa1=about10.3

(c)SincepKa1=6.38andpKa2=10.32forcarbonicacid,theacidisverylikelycarbonicacid.

78

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

14.87

(a)

H3Glu+

HO

OH
+
NH3

(b)

H2Glu

HO

NH3

(c)

HGlu

O
+

NH3

(d)

Glu2
O

14.89

14.91

14.93

O
NH2

3.89
(a)3.59
(b)2.24
Thebuffersolutionispreparedbyadding0.479molofNa2CO3forevery1.000molofNaHCO3
addedtowatertogiveanottoodiluteconcentration(sowehaveabufferwithsomecapacity).

14.95 (a)4.95

(b)5.05

14.99 0.167molL1

14.101 (a)7.46

(b)7.28

14.103 (a)0.180molL1

(b)[H3O+]=2.1103molL1

[C6H5NH3 +]=0.178molL1
[OH]=6.761012molL1

(c)2.68
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79

14.105 (a)5.35

(b)9.40

(c)10.12

(d)16.7mL
(e)10.93
(f)WeneedanindicatorwithpKaneartheequivalencepointpHi.e.pKa10.93.
IndicatorswhichchangecolourintheneighborhoodofpH=11include

alizarineyellowR.

0.0014

amount / mol

0.0012
0.001
0.0008

HCN

0.0006

CN-

0.0004
0.0002
0
0

10

15

pH

SUMMARYANDCONCEPTUALQUESTIONS

14.107 (a)10H3O+ions.

(b)1H3O+ion
(c)IfthepHwere4,thentherewouldlikelynotbeanyhydroniumionsinthecube.Tovisualize
pH=4,youwouldhavetoimaginethecubeasasnapshottakenfromalargerquantityofwater.
Ifmanysuchsnapshotswereconsidered,thenabout1in10ofthemwouldhaveasingle
hydroniumion.
(d)IftheH3O+iontowatermoleculeratiois100:55000=1:550whenpH=1.0,thenthisratiois
1:55000000whenpH=6.0(i.e.ahydroniumconcentration105timessmaller).

14.109 Abuffersolutioncontainsanottoodilutesolutionofbothaweakacidandaweakbase.When
astrongbaseisadded,theweakacidreactswithitandconsumesmostofit.Inthecaseofa
carbonate/hydrogencarbonatebuffer,thehydrogencarbonatereactswiththeaddedbase.

HCO3(aq)+OH(aq)CO32(aq)+H2O()

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Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

14.111 (a)ThefractionofaceticaciddeclinesandthatofacetateionincreasesasthepHincreases,in
accordwiththebufferequation(seethe14.107above).WecanunderstandthisusingLe
Chateliersprinciple.

CH3COO(aq)+H3O+(aq)
CH3COOH(aq)+H2O()
IncreasingpHmeansdecreasingH3O+which,accordingtoLeChateliersprinciple,causesashift
intheequilibriumtotherighti.e.depletedaceticacidandincreasedacetate.
(b)Fromthebufferequation,
[CH3COOH]
1.8 105 = 104
[H 3O + ] =

[CH 3COO ]
atpH=4.Here,weseethat[CH3COOH]/[CH3COO]mustbegreaterthan1i.e.aceticacid
predominates.
AtpH=6,therightsideoftheaboveequationis106and[CH3COOH]/[CH3COO]mustbeless
than1i.e.acetatepredominates.
(c)Fromthebufferequation,weseethat[H3O+]=Ka=1.8105,whentheaceticacidand
acetateconcentrationsareequali.e.pH=log10(1.8105)=4.74.

14.113 (a)0.00135

(b)12.0%

(c)pHathalfway=2.86

pHatequivalencepoint=7.32

Chapter15

15.1

(a)

Ag + (aq) + I (aq)
AgI(s)
Q [Ag + ][I ] K sp 1.5 1016 atequilibrium

(b)

Ba 2+ (aq) + 2 F (aq)
BaF2 (s)
Q [Ba 2+ ][F ]2 K sp 1.7 106 atequilibrium

(c)

15.4

15.6

2 Ag + (aq) + CO32 (aq)


Ag 2 CO3 (s)
Q [Ag + ]2 [CO32 ] K sp 8.1 1012 atequilibrium
Ksp=1.9x107
(a)1.3x102molL1
(b)9.6101gL1

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81

15.8

15.10

(a)AgCl
(b)Ca(OH)2
(c)Ca(OH)2
ThesolubilityofAg3PO4islargerthanthatpredictedusingKspofthesaltbecausethephosphate
ion,PO43,reactswithwatertoformHPO42(H2PO4andH3PO4uponfurtherreactionwith
water).TheconcentrationofPO43isconsequentlysignificantlyreduced,andthereaction
quotientfordissolutionofAg3PO4remainslessthanthesolubilityproductforlargerinitial
concentrationsofAg3PO4thanpredictedusingKsp.

15.13 (a)1.0 105 mol L1


(b)1.1108molL1
15.15

15.16

15.19

(a)PbS(s)
(b)Ag2CO3(s)
(c)Al(OH)3(s)
Q=5.3x109<Ksp=9.8x109
Thesolutionisnotsaturated.MorePbI2candissolve.

Q=6.3x108<Ksp=3.4x107
Themixtureisnotsaturated.SrSO4(s)willnotprecipitate.

15.20 [I]=4.4x109mol L1
[Pb2+] = 4.4 x 10-3 mol L1
15.22 [OH]=5.3106molL1

15.24 Knet= 1.1106

15.25 AtpH=1,thecyanideappearsonlyashydrogencyanide,HCN(aq).Silverappearsonlyas
Ag+(aq).AspHincreasespastpKa=log10(3.5104)=3.5,thecyanideion,CN,concentration
increases.Dependingontherelativeamountsofcyanideandsilver,someorallofthecyanide
complexessilvertheAg+(aq)concentrationdecreasesandthe[Ag(CN)2]increases.
TheconcentrationsremainconstantforpHfromabout5(i.e.whenverylittlehydrogencyanide
remains)allthewayto13.

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Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

REVIEWQUESTIONS

Pb 2+ (aq) + SO 4 2 (aq)
15.25 (a) PbSO 4 s

Q [Pb 2+ ][SO 4 2 ] K sp 1.8 108 atequilibrium.

Ni 2+ (aq) + CO32 (aq)


(b) NiCO3 s

Q [Ni 2+ ][CO32 ] Ksp 1.4 107 atequilibrium.

(c)

3Ag + (aq) + PO 43 (aq)


Ag 3 PO 4 (s)
Q [Ag + ]3 [PO 43 ] K sp 1.3 1020 atequilibrium.

Sr 2+ (aq) + 2 F (aq)
15.27 SrF2 (s)
Ksp=4.0x109

15.29 51mgofPbSO4remainsundissolved

15.31 (a)PbCl2(s)

(b)FeS(s)

(c)Fe(OH)2(s)

15.33 Q=1.1x106>Ksp=1.8x108

AgClwillprecipitateoutofsolution

15.35 (a)Q=2.4x109<Ksp=6.6x109

NiCO3willnotprecipitate

(b)Q=2.4x107>Ksp=6.6x109

NiCO3willprecipitate

15.37 Fe(OH)3(s)precipitatesfirst,followedbyAl(OH)3(s).Pb(OH)2(s)islasttoprecipitate

15.39
Au (aq) + Cl (aq)
AuCl(s)

Au (aq) + 2 CN (aq) [Au(CN) 2 ] (aq)

[Au(CN) 2 ] (aq) + Cl (aq)


AuCl(s) + 2 CN (aq)

Knet=4.0x1025

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83

SUMMARYANDCONCEPTUALQUESTIONS

15.41 5.51x105

15.43 1.4104molL1

Chapter16

16.2

16.4

16.6

(a)+3
(b)+6
(c)+4
(d)+5
CH3CH2OHisoxidized.CH3CH2OHisthereducingagent.Cr2O72isreduced.Cr2O72isthe
oxidizingagent.
AsilverelectrodeimmersedinanaqueoussolutionofAgNO3providesthecathode.Anickel
electrodeimmersedinanNi2+solutionprovidestheanode.
Theoverallcellreactionis:2Ag+(aq)+Ni(s)2Ag(s)+Ni2+(aq)
ElectronsflowfromtheNi(s)totheAg(s).NO3inthesaltbridgeflowstowardstheanode
compartmentandNa+inthesaltbridgeflowstowardthecathodecompartment.

16.7
V

(a)

direction of electron flow


anion flow
cation flow

(b)

V
direction of electron flow

Zn(s) anode Zn 2+ (aq)

anion flow

Ni 2+ (aq) Ni(s) cathode

cation flow

(c)

C(s) anode

Ag + (aq)

direction of electron flow

Ag(s) cathode

Fe 2+ (aq), Fe 3+ (aq)
anion flow
cation flow

a drop of Br 2 (l)
on the cathode

Mg(s) anode

84

Mg 2+ (aq)

Br (aq)

Pt(s) cathode

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

16.8

16.9

16.13

(a)E[Ni2+(aq)|Ni(s)]=0.25V
(b)E[Cl2(g)|Cl(aq)|Pt(s)]=1.36V
SeeaboveExercise16.8(b).

Zn(s) Zn 2 (aq) 2 e

at the anode

2 (Ag (aq) e Ag(s))

at the cathode

Zn(s) 2 Ag (aq) Zn 2 (aq) 2 Ag(s)

16.14

16.17

16.20
16.22

16.23

Ecell =1.56V
(a)Ecell=1.298V(cellreactionisnotwritteninthespontaneousdirection)
(b)Ecell=0.51V(cellreactionisnotwritteninthespontaneousdirection)
(c)Ecell=1.023 V(cellreactionisnotwritteninthespontaneousdirection)
(d)Ecell=0.028V(cellreactioniswritteninthespontaneousdirection)
(a)Aluminum
(b)Aluminumandzinc
(c)Fe2+(aq)+Sn(s)Fe(s)+Sn2+(aq).ThisisNOTthedirectionofspontaneousreaction.
(d)Zn2+(aq)+Sn(s)Zn(s)+Sn2+(aq).ThisisNOTthedirectionofspontaneousreaction.
Ecell=+1.24V
0.041molL1
(a)AtpH=0,Ecell=+1.51V
(b)At pH = 5.0, Ecell=+1.04V
ThecellpotentialisgreateratpH=0.Thismeanspermanganateisastrongeroxidizingagent
underacidicconditions.

16.25 K=1.2x1019

H 2 (g) + 2 OH (aq) (Cathodereaction)


16.27 2 H 2 O(l) + 2 e

4 OH (aq)
O 2 (g) + 2 H 2 O(l) + 4 e (Anodereaction)
Ecell = 1.23 V

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85

16.28 Thebrassfittingsprovidecathodeswhereoxygenisreducedtowater.Thesteelprovidesthe
anodewhereironisoxidizedtoFe2+.Ofcourse,thesteelcanprovideitsowncathodeandcan
corrodewithoutbrassfittings.However,becausecopper(theprincipalcomponentofbrass)isa
morenoblemetalthaniron,whenitisincontactwithironthereisaslightpolarizationatthe
junction,withironbecomingslightlypositivelycharged.Thismakestheoxidationprocessatthe
surfaceofironmorefavorable.Atthesametime,theslightnegativechargeonthebrassmakes
thereductionofoxygenmorefavorable.
Therateofcorrosionvariesfromcitytocitybecauseitdependsupontheionicstrengththe
totalconcentrationofionsofthecitywater.Ionsinthewatercarrycurrentfromtheanodeto
cathodetocompletethecircuit.Theconductivityofthewaterincreaseswithion
concentration.

16.29 Thecorrosionofironrequireswatertocarrythecurrentthatcompletesthecircuitandto
providetheaqueousenvironmentoftheproductFe2+ions.Italsorequiresoxygenfromtheair
thereactantatthecathode.Theserequirementsaremetbestattheairwaterpier
interface.Corrosionbelowthesurfacecantakeplaceduetodissolvedoxygen,butthe
concentrationislessthantheoxygenconcentrationinair.Corrosionabovethesurfaceoccurs
whenthesteelgetswet,throughwatersplashingontoitorwhenitrains.Thiswaterisnot
alwaysavailable.

16.30 (i)Tinimpedescorrosionofironbycoatingit,preventingoxygenfromcontactingtheiron.If
thetincoatinggetsscratched,theironwillcorrodequicklyatthescratchbecausethemore
noblemetaltinprovidesapreferredcathodeforreductionofoxygen.
(ii)Zincimpedescorrosionofironbyprovidingasacrificialanode.Becausezincisalessnoble
metal,itprovidesapreferredanode.Thezincisoxidized,consumingtheoxygen,inpreference
totheoxidationofiron.Scratchingthezinccoatingwillnotimpactitsabilitytoprotecttheiron.
(iii)Paintimpedescorrosionsimplybyprovidingacoating,keepingtheoxygenawayfromthe
iron.Ifitisscratched,theironwillcorrodeatthescratch,butonlyatitsnormalrateof
corrosion.Thenonconductingpaintdoesnotprovideanelectrodeforcorrosion.

REVIEWQUESTIONS

16.31

16.33

86

(a)OS(f)=1 OS(P)=+5
(b)OS(h)=+1&OS(O)=2 OS(As)=+5
(c)OS(O)=2 OS(U)=+4
(d)OS(O)=2OS(N)=+5
(e)OS(Cl)=1&OS(O)=2OS(P)=+5
(f)OS(O)=2 OS(Xe)=+6

(a)isnotanoxidationreductionreaction
(b)isanoxidationreductionreaction
(c)isnotanoxidationreductionreaction
(d)isanoxidationreductionreaction

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

Sn 2+ aq + H 2 g
16.35 (a) Sn s + 2 H + aq

(b) Cr2 O7 2- aq + 6 Fe 2+ aq + 14 H + (aq)


2 Cr 3+ aq + 6 Fe3+ aq + 7 H 2 O(l)

(c) MnO 2 s 2 Cl aq + 4 H + (aq)


Mn 2 aq Cl2 g + 2 H 2 O(l)

(d) HCHO aq + 2 Ag + aq + H 2 O(l)


HCOOH aq + 2 Ag s + 2 H + (aq)

16.37 Electrons in the external circuit flow from the chromium electrode (the anode) to the iron
electrode (the cathode). Negative ions move in the salt bridge from the Fe2+|Fe half-cell (the
reduction half-cell) to the Cr|Cr3+ half-cell (the oxidation half-cell). The half-reaction at the
anode is Cr(s) Cr3+(aq) + 3 e and that at the cathode is Fe2+(aq) + 2 e Fe(s).
16.39

(a)+(c)
V
direction of electron flow
NO3
Na+

Mg(s) anode Mg2+(aq)

Ag+(aq)

Ag(s) cathode

(b)

16.41

16.43

Ag aq e
Ag s (reductionhalfreactionthatoccursatthecathode)
+
Mg(s)+2Ag (aq)Mg2+(aq)+2Ag(s) (netreactioninthecell)


Mg s
Mg 2 aq 2 e (oxidationhalfreactionthatoccursattheanode).

(a)+0.78V
(b)=0.32V
(a)when

p (NO)
1.00
[NO3 ][H ]4

(b)E[NO3(aq)|NO(g)]=0.96V

16.45 (a)Tomakeacellwithpotentialcloseto1.1V,usingtheZn2+(aq)Zn(s)halfcell,wecoulduse
theCu2+(aq)Cu(s)halfcellasthecathodeandtheZn2+(aq)Zn(s)halfcellastheanode.
Ecell = E[Cu2+(aq)| Cu(s)] E[Zn2+(aq)|Zn(s)] = 0.337 V (0.763 V) = 1.10 V
(b)Tomakeacellwithpotentialcloseto0.5V,usingtheZn2+(aq)Zn(s)halfcell,wecoulduse
theNi2+(aq)Ni(s)halfcellasthecathodeandtheZn2+(aq)Zn(s)halfcellastheanode.
Ecell = E[ Ni2+(aq)Ni(s) ] E[Zn2+(aq)|Zn(s)] = 0.25 V (0.763 V) = 0.51 V

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

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16.47

16.49

16.53

16.55

(a)Se(s)
(b)F(aq)
(c)F2(g),Cl2(g)
(d)F2(g),Cl2(g),Br2(),I2(s),O2(g)
(e)Yes
(f)No
(g)No
(h)Yes
(a)isNOTthedirectionofspontaneousreaction
(b)isthedirectionofspontaneousreaction
(c)isNOTthedirectionofspontaneousreaction
(d)isthedirectionofspontaneousreaction
(a)isthedirectionofspontaneousreaction
(b)isNOTthedirectionofspontaneousreaction
(c)isNOTthedirectionofspontaneousreaction
(d)isthedirectionofspontaneousreaction
AddingaKIsolutiontoastandardacidicsolutionofCu(NO3)2causesabrowncolouranda
precipitatetoformbecausethenitrateionoxidizesiodideundertheseconditions.TheI2thatis
formedfirstreactswithiodidetoformthebrownI3(aq)ion.Asiodidegetsconsumedthe
excessinsolubleiodineprecipitates.AsimilarresponseisnotobservedwhenKClorKBr
solutionsareaddedbecausenitratecannotoxidizechlorideorbromideunderstandard
conditionsthereisnoreaction.
6I(aq)+2NO3(aq)+8H+(aq)3I2(s)+2NO(g)+4H2O()(Balancedequation)

16.57 Ecell=+1.585V
16.59 (a)
V
direction of electron flow
salt bridge

Cd(s) anode

Cd2+(aq)

(b)

Ni2+(aq)

Ni(s) cathode

Ni 2+ (aq) + 2e
Ni(s)

Cd(s)
Cd 2+ (aq) + 2e

Ni (aq) + Cd(s)
Ni(s) + Cd (aq)
2+

2+

(c)TheNi(s)electrodeisthecathodeitislabeled+.Thecadmiumanodeislabeled.
88

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

(d) Ecell =+0.15V


(e)fromanodetocathode
(f)TheNa+(aq)ionsinthesaltbridgemovefromtheanodecompartmenttothecathode
compartment.TheNO3(aq)ionsmovefromthecathodecompartmenttotheanode
compartment.
(g)K=1.2x105
(h) Ecell =+0.21V
SinceEcellisstillpositive,thenetreactionisinthesamedirectiongiveninpart(b).

16.61 (a)Ecell = +0.236 V, K = 9.5 x 107

(b)Ecell = 0.531 V, K = 1.1 x 10-18


16.65 Kf=2.3x1025
16.67
V
direction of electron flow

Na+
Cl

Cl2(g) formed at anode


anode

cathode

-oxidation of Cl to Cl2(g)
takes place here

-reduction of Na+ to Na(s)


takes place here
- sodium metal plates
onto cathode

16.69 Fluorinehasthelargestreductionpotentialofallspecies.Oxygengaswillformattheanodein
theelectrolysisofanaqueousKFsolution.
16.71Thebumperonanoffroadvehicleislikelytogetscratched.Thechromeplatedsteelwillcorrode
atthescratchfasterthanitwouldwithouttheplating.Thisisbecausechromiumisa(slightly)
morenoblemetalthaniron.Thegalvanizedsteelstaysprotected,evenwithscratches,untilallof
thezincplatingisoxidizedbycorrosion.Notethatcorrosionofzincisslowerthanthatforiron
becausezincoxidecoatsthezincprotectingitfromatmosphericoxygen.Whenironoxidizes,its
oxidedoesnotcoatthemetal.Thisisthetroublewithironitisvulnerabletocorrosion.

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

89

16.73

electron flow

electron flow

Fe(s) cathode

inert
electrode

pipeline serves as cathode


in this electrolytic cell

serves as
anode

O2(g) + 4 H+(aq) + 2 e 2 H2O(l)


2 H2O(l) O2(g) + 4 H+(aq) + 2 e
Cl flow
Na+ and Mg2+ flow
By keeping the pipeline at a higher
potential than the inert electrode, the
pipeline behaves like a metal even
more noble - it does not corrode.

SUMMARYANDCONCEPTUALQUESTIONS

16.75 (a)Inthiscase,theironscrewsincontactwiththemorenoblecopperalloycorroderapidly.
Theycrumble,leavingholesinthecopperalloysheetswherewaterleaksin.
(b)Inthiscase,theironwrenchisthemorenoblemetal.Itacceleratesthecorrosionofthe
aluminumincontactwithitbypolarizingthealuminum,makingitslightlypositive.The
aluminumcorrodesrapidlyleavingawrenchshapedholeinthehull.

16.77 Iftheemfisappliedinthewrongdirection,thecorrosionofthepipelinewillbeaccelerated.
Thepotentialofthepipelineislowereditischargedpositivelyandtheoxidation(ofFe(s))
halfreactionismademorefavourable.

Chapter17

17.1

17.3

90

Thechangeinentropyforareversibleprocess(i.e.addtheheatveryslowly)isjustheatflow
intothesystemdividedbytemperature.Therefore,theentropyofthewaterandhexane
changebythesameamountitdependsonlyonthetemperatureofthesystemandthe
amountofheatadded.

S=q/T=106J/323.15K=3095J/K,forboththewaterandhexane.
121J/K

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

17.5

17.8

(a)1molofO3(g)
(b)1molofSnCl4(g)
(c)3molofO2(g)

(a)+160.59JK1
(b)198.76JK1

17.10 Sosys=134.23JK1

Hosys=657.01kJ

Souniv=+2071JK1
Sincethechangeinentropyfortheuniverseuponforwardreactionispositive,thereactionis
spontaneous.

17.12 (a)Type2

(b)Type3

(c)Type1

(d)Type2

17.14 rSo=198.76JK1

rHo=91.8kJ

rGo=32.6kJ

1
3
17.15 (a) 2 N2(g)+ 2 H2(g)NH3(g)
3

(b)2Fe(s)+ 2 O2(g)Fe2O3(s)
(c)3C(s)+3H2(g)+O2(g)CH3CH2COOH()
(d)Ni(s)istheelementinitsstandardstate.ItsfG=0.

17.17 rGo=70.87kJ

17.18 rGo=142.12kJ
Thereactionisspontaneousintheforwarddirection

17.19 T=838.7K

17.21 (a)rS<0.rGincreaseswithincreasingT.

(b)rS>0.rGdecreaseswithincreasingT.

(c)rS<0.rGincreaseswithincreasingT.

(d)rS>0.rGdecreaseswithincreasingT.

17.22 rGo=1.13kJ

17.25 rGo=+120.023kJ
K=9.18x1022

17.26 41kJ

17.27 +147kJ.Thereversereactionisspontaneous.
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91

17.28 (a)Eo=0.236V
rGo=45.5kJ

K=9.46x107

(b)Eo=0.531V
rGo=102kJ
K=7.58x1017

17.30

17.32

(a)rGo=141.73kJ
(b)1.43x1025
(c)6.67x105
(a)p40C=1.37103bar
(b)p100C=6.20102bar
(c)62.5kJ

REVIEWQUESTIONS
17.33

22.0 J K1 mol1

17.35

(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)

NaCl(g)
H2S(g)
C2H4(g)
H2SO4()

17.37
r S = 1 S o (C 2 H 6 ,g) [2 S o (C,graphite) + 3 S o (H 2 , g)]
= 229.60 J K 1 mol1 [2 5.740 J K 1 mol1 + 3 130.684 J K 1 mol1 ]
= 173.93 J K 1 mol1

17.41

1. C(s) = C(graphite)

rS1=S[CH4(g)](S[C(s)]+2S[H2(g)])
=186.3JK1mol1(5.74JK1mol1+2130.7JK1mol1)=80.8JK1mol1
2. rS2 = S[CH3OH()] (S[CH4(g)] + S[O2(g)])
=126.8JK1mol1(186.3JK1mol1+205.1JK1mol1)=162.1JK1mol1
3. rS3 = S[CH3OH()] (S[C(s)] + 2 S[H2(g)] + S[O2(g)])

=126.8JK1mol1(5.74JK1mol1+2130.7JK1mol1+205.1JK1mol1)

=242.9JK1mol1
Justasreactions1&2addtogivereaction3,therSvaluesaddinthesamefashion.

rS1+rS2=80.8JK1mol1162.1JK1mol1=242.9JK1mol1=rS3

ThisisanexampleofHesssLawappliedtoentropy,whichcanonlybethecaseifSisastate
function.

92

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

17.43
S o univ = S o sys S o surr = 20.0 J K 1 mol1 619.5 J K 1 mol1
= 639.5 J K 1 mol1
This reaction is spontaneous in the forward direction, under the reaction mixture conditions
specified.
17.45

H 2 O(l)
H 2 (g) + 12 O 2 (g)
Ssys=(S[H2(g)]+S[O2(g)])S[H2O()]

=(130.7JK1mol1+205.1JK1mol1)69.91JK1mol1=163.3JK1mol1
Hsys=(fH[H2(g)]+fH[O2(g)])fH[H2O()]

=285.8kJmol100=285.8kJmol1
H o sys
285.8 103 J mol1
o
S surr =
=
= 959.1 J K 1 mol1
298K
T
S o univ = S o sys S o surr = 163.3 J K 1 mol1 959.1 J K 1 mol1
= 795.8 J K 1 mol1
This reaction is NOT spontaneous. There is no danger of water spontaneously decomposing into
its elements. On the contrary, reaction in the opposite direction is spontaneous (but very slow) if
in the reaction mixture at 25 C, p(H2) = p(O2) = 1 bar.

17.47

At sufficiently high T, the system change in entropy will be the dominant term and the reaction
will be spontaneous.

17.49 (a)=1258.1kJmol1
Thisreactionisspontaneous.Itisenthalpydriven.
(b)=124.6kJmol1
ThisreactionisNOTspontaneous.Bothenthalpyandentropytermsdisfavourthisprocess.

17.51

This problem is answered using thermochemical data from the NIST webbook
(webbook.nist.gov).
Thisvalueagreeswiththetabulatedfreeenergyofformation(fG)foraceticacid,aslongas
thesamedatabaseisusedtobeconsistent(thesedataarenotalwaysaccuratelydetermined,
ortabulated).Thisshouldnotbesurprisingbecausethereactionofinterestistheoneforwhich
rG=fG,bydefinition.

17.53

= 1139.2 kJ mol1

17.55

= 106 C.

17.57

= 1441.61 kJ mol1

17.59

K is very small, in accord with a positive standard free energy changethe forward reaction is
NOT favoured in a reaction mixture at 25 C and all reactants and products in their standard
states (i.e., the conditions that apply for specification of the standard free energy change of
reaction).

This is in accord with experience.

= 4.73 kJ mol1

17.63 =166.27kJmol1

17.61

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93


17.65 =92.4C

SUMMARYANDCONCEPTUALQUESTIONS

17.67 (a)rS=2S[Hg()]+S[O2(g)]2S[HgO(s)]

=276.02JK1mol1+205.138JK1mol1270.29JK1mol1=
216.60JK1mol1

rH=0+02fH[HgO(s)]=2(90.83kJmol1)=181.66kJmol1

ApositiverHcorrespondstoanegativeHsurrandanegativeSsurr.
rG=vapHTvapS
=181.66kJmol1298.15K216.60JK1mol1/(1000J/kJ)=117kJmol1
We have rG at 25 C, so we can calculate K at 25 C (298 K) from rG -RT lnK
117 000 J mol-1 = (-8.314 J K-1 mol-1)(298 K) lnK
lnK = (117 000 J mol1)/(-8.314 J K1 mol1)(298 K) = -47.22
K at 298 K = 3.1 1021

17.69

17.71

(a) rS = 128.133 J K1 mol1


(b) The reaction is NOT spontaneous at 25 C and under standard conditions.
(c) rH = rG + T rS
= 115.55 kJ mol1 298 K 128.133 J K1 mol1/ (1000 J /kJ) = 77.37 kJ mol1
The minimum temperature at which the reaction becomes spontaneous is such that
rG = rH Tspon rS = 0 (above Tspon , rG < 0)
Tspon = rH / rS = 77.37 103 J mol1 / 115.55 J K1 mol1 = 669.5 K
(a)
= 0.141 kJ mol1
The rhombic form of S8 solid is more stable than the monoclinic form at 80 C.
rG = rH T rS = 3.213 kJ mol1 383.15 K (8.7 J K1 mol1) / (1000 J /kJ) =
0.120 kJ mol1
The monoclinic form of S8 solid is more stable than the rhombic form at 110 C.
(b)
rG = rH Ttrans rS = 0
at temperature, Ttrans, the temperature at which rhombic sulfur transforms to monoclinic sulfur.
Ttrans = rH / rS = 3.213 103 J mol1/(8.7 J K1 mol1) = 369 K = 96 C.

17.73

(a)rH = 62.10 kJ mol1


rS 132.738 J K1 mol1
rG = 22.524 kJ mol1
(b)
= 1.13 104 bar
rG = rH T rS = 0
(c)
at T = rH / rS = 62.10 103 J mol1/ (132.738 J K1 mol1) = 468 K
At this temperature, the vapour pressure of oxygen is 1.00 bar.

94

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

17.75

Hg() Hg(g)
rH = fH[Hg(g)] = 61.38 kJ mol1
rS = S[Hg(g)] S[Hg()] = 174.97 J K1 mol1 76.02 J K1 mol1
= 98.95 J K1 mol1
rG = rH T rS = 61.38 kJ mol1 298.15 K (98.95 J K1 mol1) / (1000 J /kJ ) =
31.88 kJ mol1
(a) p(Hg) = 1.00 bar
K = 1.00
rG=RTln(K)=0
=rHTrS
So,
T=rH/rS=61.38103Jmol1/98.95JK1mol1=620K
(b) p(Hg) = 1.33 103 bar
K = 1.33 103
rG = RT ln(K) = rH T rS
Solve for T.
T = rH / (rS R ln(K))
= 61.38 103 J mol1/ (98.95 J K1 mol1 8.314 J K1 mol1 ln(1.33 103)) = 399 K

17.77

(a) Entropy of the system decreases in some spontaneous reactions. These reactions occur
because of the increase in the entropy of the surroundings caused by the heat liberatedthey are
enthalpy driven reactions. However it is correct that the entropy of the universe increases with
every spontaneous reaction.
(b) Reactions with a negative free energy change (rG 0) are product-favoured. However,
these reactions sometimes occur very slowly. rG tells us how far a reaction will go to attain a
condition of equilibrium, but does not tell us the speed of the reaction.
(c) Some spontaneous processes are endothermic. These reactions occur because the system
entropy increases sufficiently to exceed the entropy lost by surroundings due to heat absorbed by
the systemthey are entropy driven reactions.
(d) Endothermic processes are sometimes spontaneoussee answer to (c).

17.79 rSisusuallypositiveforthedissolutionofcondensedsubstances.Dissolvedspecieshave
morefreedomasasolutethanasapurecondensedphase.Thereisapositivecomponentto
theentropyofdissolutionsimplyduetothedisorderofhavingamixtureoftwospecies.Inthis
typicalcaseofpositiveentropyofdissolution,ifrH=0
rG=rHTrS<0
andthedissolutionisspontaneous.Suchdissolutionsaredrivenbyentropy.
Somecondensedsubstancese.g.,liquidhydrocarbonsactuallyhavenegativeentropyof
dissolutioninwater.Thehydrophobiceffectisactuallyattributabletothenegativechangein
entropyassociatedwiththewatermoleculessolvatingthehydrophobicmolecule.

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17.81

C6H6(s) C6H6()
(a) rH > 0
It takes energy (enthalpy) to break the intermolecular bonds holding the benzene molecules
rigidly in their lattice positions.
(b) rS > 0
A liquid has more disordermore entropythan the corresponding solid.
(c) rG = 0
at 5.5 C, the melting point, where the solid and liquid co-exist.
at 0.0 C < the melting point, where the solid is the more stable phase.
(d) rG > 0
at 25.0C > the melting point, where the liquid is the more stable phase.
(e) rG < 0

17.83

rG < 0
This process is spontaneousiodine dissolves readily in CCl4.
rS = (rH rG) / T > 0 since rH = 0
This dissolution is an entropy-driven process.

17.85

(a) N2H4() + O2(g) N2(g) + 2 H2O()


This is an oxidation-reduction reactionoxygen is the oxidizing agent and hydrazine is the
reducing agent.
(b)rH = 622.29 kJ mol1
rS = 5.08 J K1 mol1
rG = 623.80 kJ mol1

Chapter18

18.2

18.3

18.4

18.7

Forevery2molesofNOClconsumed,thereare2molesofNOandonemoleofCl2produced.
TherelativerateofappearanceofCl2istherateofappearanceofNOwhichequalstherateof
disappearanceofNOCl.
Inthefirsttwohours:0.0085molL1h1
Inthelasttwohours:0.002molL1h1
Theinstantaneousrateofdecayatt=4.0h:0.0044molL1h1
(a)Rate=k[NO2][O3]
(b)Theratetriples.
(c)Therateishalved.
Rate=k[NO]2[O2]
k = 7100 mol2 L2 s1

18.9 0.0035molL1

18.11 0.00217molL1

18.13 Theplotofln([N2O5])versustimegivesastraightline.Thereactionisfirstorder.

96

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

18.15

18.17

18.19

(a)t1/2of241Am=430years
t1/2of125I=63years
(b)125I
(c)1.57x1015atoms
57.2kJmol1
Allthreeoftheseprocessesarebimolecular.
Therateequationforthethirdstep:Rate=k[N2O][H2]

2 NO
N 2O2

N 2 O 2 + H 2
N 2O + H 2O
N 2 O + H 2
N 2 + H 2O
2 NO + 2 H 2
N 2 + 2 H 2O

18.21

(a)2NH3(aq)+OCl(aq)N2H4(aq)+H2O()+Cl(aq)
(b)step2
(c)Rate=k[NH2Cl][NH3]
(d)NH2Cl,N2H5+andOH

18.22

(a)Rate=k[CH3(CH2)5CHBrCH3][OH]
(b)Therateofreactionwilldouble.
(c)Therateofreactionwilldouble.
(d)
H
O

CH3

H3C

Br H

(e)

(R)-octan-2-ol

CH3

H3C
H

OH

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18.23 (a)Therateofsubstitutionwilldouble

(b)Therateofsubstitutionwillnotchange

(c)

CH3

CH3

CH3

(d)Whetherornotinversiontakesplaceisirrelevantherebecausetheproductisthesamein
bothcasesduetosymmetry.
(e)TheproportionofthisreactionthatproceedsbytheSN2mechanismisnegligiblebecausethe
rateoftheSN1mechanismisenhancedbytherelativelystablecarbocationintermediate,and
becausetherateoftheSN2mechanismisreducedbythepresenceofthethreemethylgroups
aboutthecarboncenter.Theportionofcollisionsbetweeniodideandtertbutylchloridewhich
canleadtoreactionismuchsmallerthanthevalueformethylchloride(forexample).Thethree
methylgroupspresentanobstaclelimitingtherateoftheSN2reaction.TheSN1mechanism
presentsnosuchobstacletheiodidereactswithareactiveplanarintermediate.

REVIEWQUESTIONS

18.25

18.27

18.29

18.31

18.33

18.35

98

3.0104molL1min1
ThereactionissecondorderinAandfirstorderinB.Thetotalorderofthereactionisthree.
1.8103molL1h1.TherateofreactionistherateofchangeofCl,forthisreaction.
(a)secondorderinNOandfirstorderinO2
(b) Rate = k [NO]2 [O 2 ]
(c)25mol2L2s1
(d)2.8105molL1s1
(e)O2(g)reactsatrate=5.0105molL1s1;i.e.onehalftherateofNO.NO2(g)formsatthesame
rateasNO,1.0104molL1s1.
(a)ThereactionissecondorderinNOandfirstorderinH2
(b) Rate = k [NO]2 [H 2 ]
(c)6.32mol2L2s1
(d)0.159molL1s1

(a) Rate = k [CO]2 [O 2 ]


(b)secondorderin[CO]andfirstorderin[O2]
(c)4.6mol2L2min1

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

18.37

18.39

18.43

18.45

18.47

18.49

18.51

18.53

18.55

(a)0.58
(b)1280s
495min1
105min
Theln[phenylacetate]dataisbestfitbyastraightline.Thehydrolysisofphenylacetateisafirst
reaction.
k=0.021s1
Rate=k[NO2]2
k=1.1Lmol1s1
(a)23min
(b)77min
36s
84.9kJmol1

H--H--F
H2(g) + F(g)

Ea = 8 kJ mol1

H = 133 kJ mol1

HF(g) + H(g)

18.57

18.59

(b)Rate=k2[O3][O]

(a)Rate=k[Cl][ICl]
(b)Rate=k[O][O3]
(c)Rate=k[NO2]2
(a)Step2

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99

18.61 (a)

Step 1

Slow

H 2 O 2 aq + I aq
H 2 O l + OI aq

Step 2

Fast

H + aq + OI aq
HOI aq

Step 3

Fast

HOI aq + H + aq + I aq
I 2 aq + H 2 O l
H 2 O 2 aq + 2 I aq + 2 H + aq
2 H 2 O l + I 2 aq

(b)Thefirsttwostepsarebimolecular,whilethelastisternary.

(c)Rate=k2[H2O2][I]

18.63 (a)NO2(g)andCO(g)arereactants.
NO3(g)isanintermediate.
CO2(g)andNO(g)areproducts.

(b)
slow

fast
Ea1

Ea2
NO + NO3 + CO

2 NO2 + CO

H
1 NO2 appears as both reactant and
product - it cancels from the net reaction

NO2 + NO + CO2

100

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

SUMMARYANDCONCEPTUALQUESTIONS

18.65 Noanswerprovided.Theywillbederivedfromexplorationofthisactivity.

18.67 (a)False
Whiletheobservedratelawisconsistentwithasinglestepprocess,theremaybeothermulti
stepmechanismsalsoconsistentwiththeobservedratelaw.
(b)True

(c)False
Increasingtemperaturemeansmorefrequentandmoreenergeticcollisions(thataremore
frequentlysuccessful)i.e.therateincreaseswithtemperature.

(d)
False

Theactivationenergyisfixedbythereaction.Itdoesnotvarywithtemperature.
(e)False
Theratewillincreasefourfoldifbothconcentrationsaredoubled.

(f)True

18.69 (a)True

(b)True

(c)False
Therategenerallyvarieswithtimee.g.infirstandsecondorderreactions.Onlyforzeroorder
reactionsdoestherateremainconstant.Zeroorderreactionsarisewhenthereisalimited
amountofacatalystandthereactantsarepresentinabundance.Inanycase,reactionsareonly
zeroorderforatime.Eventually,reactantsdepletesufficientlythattheamountofcatalystisno
longerratelimiting,andthereactionisnolongerzeroorder.

(d)False
Itispossiblethatthereactionproceedsviaasingleternaryprocess.Ternaryprocessesare
infrequent,buttheycanplayimportantroles.

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101

Chapter19

19.2

(a)

102

(b)

(c)

(d)

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

19.4

(a)CH3CH=CH2
Nocistransisomers.

(b)(CH3)2C=CHCH3
Nocistransisomers.

(c)

(e)

19.6

(d)

(f)

(a)Br
(b)Br
(c)CH2CH3
(d)OH
(e)CH2OH
(f)CH=O

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103

19.7

(a)
Cl
O
H3C

CH3
H

(b)
O

O
CH3

H3C

O
H

CH3

19.8 ThisistheZisomer.

19.9 Thetwodownfieldlines,atabout139and113ppm,arethetwoalkenecarbonpeaks.

19.10
H

H
H

H
H

19.11 (a)substitution

(b)elimination

(c)addition

104

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

19.13
(a)

(b)

R
O

O
R

(c)

(d)

MgBr

O
O

19.14 (a)NH4+
Ammoniumisanelectrophile.Itisattractedtoconcentrationsofnegativecharge,andwill
donateaprotontoprotonacceptorsi.e.nucleophiles.
(b)CN
Cyanideisanucleophile.Itisattractedtoconcentrationsofpositivecharge(i.e.regionsof
depletedelectrondensity)suchasacidicprotonsandcarbonylcarbons.

(c)Br
Bromideisanucleophile.Itisattractedtoconcentrationsofpositivecharge(i.e.regionsof
depletedelectrondensity).

(d)CH3NH2
TheamineNatomisanucleophile.Itisattractedtoconcentrationsofpositivecharge(i.e.
regionsofdepletedelectrondensity).

(e)HC CH
Acetyleneisanucleophile.Ithasarelativelylooselyheldcloudofelectronswhich
electrophilesareattractedtoandviceversa.

19.15 BF3iselectrondeficientatthelowelectronegativityboronatom.IntheLewisstructureofBF3,
theboronatomhasonly6electronsinitsvalenceshell.BF3iselectrophilicattheboroncenter.

19.16

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105

19.17 (a)CH3CH2CHClCH3
(b)(CH3)2CICH2CH2CH3
(c)chlorocyclohexane
Cl

19.18 (a)BromocyclopentanecanbepreparedfromcyclopenteneandHBr.
(b)3Bromohexanecanbepreparedfromhex2eneandHBr.
(c)1Iodo1isopropylcyclohexanecanbepreparedfromdimethylmethylenecyclohexane,
CH3

(d)

CH3
CH2

HBr

CH3
H

19.19

(a)

Br

(b)

19.20

106

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

19.21 (a)Additionofwaterto3methylhex3enegives3methylhexan3ol,

(b)Additionofwaterto1methylcyclopentenegives1methylcyclopentanol

(c)Additionofwaterto2,5dimethylhept2enegives2,5dimethylheptan2ol

19.22 (a)Butan2olcanbemadebyadditionofwatertobut1eneorbut2ene.
(b)3Methylpentan3olcanbemadebyadditionofwaterto3methylpent2eneor2
ethylbut1ene.
(c)1,2Dimethylcyclohexanolcanbemadebyadditionofwaterto1,2dimethylcyclohexeneor
1,6dimethylcyclohexene.

19.23 Ifthesecondbromineaddedtotheothercarbontheoneontheleft,thentheenantiomeric
productwouldbeformed.Bysymmetry,thispathwayisjustaslikelyastheoneshowninFigure
19.30ofthetext.Thetwoenantiomericproductswouldbeformedinequalamounts.

19.24

Thetwoenantiomersof1,2dibromo1,2dimethylcyclohexaneareexpecteduponbromination
of1,2dimethylcyclohexene.

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107

19.25 SeeExercise19.24above

19.26 (a)Catalytichydrogenationof(CH3)2C=CHCH2CH3produces(CH3)2CHCH2CH2CH3.
(b)Catalytichydrogenationof3,3dimethylcyclopentenegives3,3dimethylcyclopentane.

19.27 (a)

(b)

19.28(a)(CH3)2C=O+CO2istheproductupontreating(CH3)2C=CH2withacidicKMnO4.
(b)2equivCH3CH2CO2HistheproductupontreatingoneequivalentofCH3CH2CH=CHCH2CH3with
acidicKMnO4.

19.29 (a)6methylhept3yne
(b)3,3dimethylbut1yne
(c)5methylhex2yne
(d)hept2en5yne

19.30 Thepeakjustabove3300cm1lookslikeanalkyneCHstretch,whilethepeakjustabove2100
cm1lookslikeanasymmetricalkyneCCstretch.TherealsoappeartobealkylCHstretch
peaksjustbelow3000cm1.ThecompoundlikelyhasalkylHsinadditiontothealkynylH.

19.31 Thetwodownfieldpeaks,~68and~85ppm,arecharacteristicofanalkyne.Alkene13Cchemical
shiftsoccurfurtherdownfield.

19.32 TheunknowncompoundiseitherCH3CH2CH2CH2CCHor(CH3CH2)CH3CHCCH.

108

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

19.33

H3C
H3C

H2SO4+ HgSO4

CH3
CH3

OH

H3C

CH3
O

19.34 (a)Tomake2pentanoneyoucouldhydrate1pentyne,CH3CH2CH2CCH.
(b)Tomake3hexanoneyoucouldhydrate2hexyne,CH3CH2CH2CCCH3.

19.35 (a)Tomake5methylhex1yne,(CH3)2CHCH2CH2CCHyoucouldstartwith
ethyne(acetylene),HCCH,treatitwithNaNH2tomakesodiumacetylide
addto3methylbutylbromide,(CH3)2CHCH2CH2Br

(b)Tomake2hexyne,CH3CH2CH2CCCH3youcouldstartwith
propyne,HCCCH3,treatitwithNaNH2tomakesodiumpropynylide
addtopropylbromide,CH3CH2CH2Br
Alternatively,youcouldtreat
pentyne,CH3CH2CH2CCH,withNaNH2tomakesodiumpentynylide
addtomethylbromide,CH3Br
(c)Tomake4methylpent2yne,(CH3)2CHCCCH3youcouldstartwith
propyne,HCCCH3,treatitwithNaNH2tomakesodiumpropynylide
addtoisopropylbromide,(CH3)2CHBr
Alternatively,youcouldtreat
3methylbut1yne,(CH3)2CHCCH,withNaNH2tomakesodium3methylbutynylide
addtomethylbromide,CH3Br

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109

REVIEWQUESTIONS

19.37 -carotene is added to commercial food for ornamental fish to make the colour of the fish
(specifically the red-orange component of the colour) brighter and richer. -carotene is a redorange pigment, used in nature along with other pigments to make colours.
19.39 (a)Alkylandnitrile(orcyano)groupsarepresentinpropanenitrile(a.k.a.cyanoethane).
(b)Alkylandethergroupsarepresentincyclopentylmethylether.
(c)Alkyl,ketoneandestergroupsarepresentinmethyl3ketobutanoate(a.k.a.methyl
ethanoylethanoateormethylacetylacetate).
(d)Alkeneandketonegroupsarepresentin1,4benzoquinone.

(e)Alkeneandamidegroupsarepresentin2butenamide.
(f) Phenylandcarboxylgroupsarepresentinbenzoicacid.

19.41 Thedoublebondswithintheringsattheendsofcarotenearebetweencarbon1(thecarbon
connectedtothechain)andcarbon2,whereastheringdoublebondsincaroteneare
betweencarbon2andcarbon3.Otherwise,thetwomoleculesareidentical.
TheHOMOLUMOgapforcaroteneislargerthanthatforlycopene.Whereascarotene
absorbsbluelightandappearsorange,lycopeneabsorbsgreenlight(lowerfrequencyandlower
energythanbluelight)andappearsred.

19.43

(a)
H3C

CH3
H

(b)
H3C

CH3
CH

H3C
3

19.45 (a)4methylpent1ene
(b)3heptene
(c)1,5heptadiene
(d)2methylhex3ene

19.47 (a+b+c)Allthreeofthesemoleculeshavecistransisomers.

19.49 Methylcarboxylate,COOCH3,hashigherpriorotythancarboxyl,COOH.

19.51 (a)Z

(b)Z

110

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

19.53 (a)substitution
(b)elimination
(c)addition
(d)substitution

19.55
tr a n s itio n s ta t e

s lo w
E a2

tr a n s itio n s ta t e

fa s t
E a1

in te r m e d ia te

r e a c ta n ts

p r o d u c ts

19.57 CH3CH2CH=CHCH3 + HCl CH3CH2CHClCH2CH3 or CH3CH2CH2CHClCH3


Cl

CH3

Cl

H3C

Cl
Cl

CH3
H

H3C

CH3
H

Cl

H3C

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

CH3

CH3

H3C

Cl

H3C

H3C

CH3
H

111

19.59
H

H
H3C

H3C

CH3

Thecarbocationontheleftisthemorestable.

19.61
(a)
CH2

H2 & Pd

CH3

H
(b)

Br2
H

H
(c)

Br

Br

Br
H

HBr
H

H
(d)

H
KMnO4 NaOH H2O

112

OH

OH
H

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

19.63

Oxidativecleavageof

yieldsasingleproduct,
O

OH
OH
becauseofsymmetry.
Oxidativecleavageof

givestwodistinctproducts,
O

HO

OH

O
OH
HO

19.65

CH3

CH3

CH3

O
CH3

CH3

CH3

O
CH3

CH3

19.67(a)6
(b)6
(c)3

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113

19.69
Br

CH
1 equiv HBr

CH2

H3C
H3C

Cl

CH
1 equiv Cl2
H3C
H3C

CH

H
H2 + Lindlar catalyst
H

H3C

H3C

19.71
H3C

CH

NaNH2
H3C

114

Na

CH3Br

Cl

H2 + Lindlar catalyst
H3C

CH3

H3C

CH3

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

SUMMARYANDCONCEPTUALQUESTIONS

19.73 (a)

1-hexene,

2-methylpent-2-ene

CH3

19.75

H3C O

CH3

H3C

(c)
H3C

H3C OH

CH3
H3C

2,3-dimethylbut-2-ene

(b)
H3C

CH3

H3C

CH3

CH2

CH3

H3C

H3C

Br

Br

AnOHbondisformed,aCHbondisbroken,aCCbondisformed(tomakeadoublebond)
andaCBrbondisbroken.

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115

19.77
H

H
+

H
C

H
+

H
H

Becauseofthesethreeadditionalresonancestructures,the+chargeofthecarbocationis
spreadoutdelocalizedoverfourcarbonatoms.Thismakesthebenzylcarbocationespecially
stableforacarbocation.

19.79
O
H

H3C

O
S

CH2

H3C

O
+

H3C

CH3

H3C

H
O
H3C

CH3

O
O

O
O

H3C

116

CH3
H

CH3

H3C

O
S

CH3

CH3

H3C

O
S

CH3

CH3
CH3

CH3

H3C

CH3
CH3

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

19.81
B

A
3 H2 Pd catalyst

CH3

CH

KMnO4 - suppose acidic conditions


O

+
NaNH2 - followed by iodomethane

OH

+
HO

CO2

CH3

19.83 TreatacetylenewithNaNH2togetacetylide,HCC.Addto1bromotridecane,CH3(CH2)12Brto
getCH3(CH2)12CCH.TreatwithNaNH2togetpentadecynylide.Addto1bromooctane,
CH3(CH2)7BrtogetCH3(CH2)12CC(CH2)7CH3.

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117

19.85

much slower

fast

H
C

slow
Br

H3C

fast
Ea2

Ea1

H
C

H
H

H3C

H
H3C

H
H

H3C

Br

H
H

118

H3C

Br H

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition


19.87

H
O

C
H

H
H

H
H
H

Chapter20

20.1

20.2

20.3

236kJ/mol
(a)Cyclobutadieneismonocyclic,planarandfullyconjugated.Cyclobutadieneisantiaromatic.
(b)Cyclohepta1,3,5trieneismonocyclicandplanar,butnotfullyconjugated.
(c)Cyclopenta1,3dieneismonocyclicandplanar,butnotfullyconjugated.
(d)Cyclooctatetraeneismonocyclic,planarandfullyconjugated.Cyclobutadieneisanti
aromatic.
(a)Benzenehasjustone13CNMRabsorptionpeak.

(b)Chlorobenzenehasfour13CNMRabsorptionpeaks.
Cl

(c)Naphthalenehasthree13CNMRabsorptionpeaks.

(d)1,3dichlorobenzenehasfour13CNMRabsorptionpeaks.

Cl

Cl

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119

20.4

CH3

20.5

20.6

20.8

20.9

(a)ThereisanarylCHstretchingbandwiththreepeaksat3100,3070and3030cm1.The
alkylCHstretchingbandwithprincipalpeaksat2925and2850cm1.
(b)TheoutofplaneCHbendingvibrationsgiverisetotwopeaksat740and700cm1.
(c)TheinplaneCHbendingvibrationsproducepeaksat1090and1030cm1.ThearylCC
stretchesproduceabandwithprincipalpeaksat1610,1510and1470cm1.
Furanhas6electronsinitssystem.Itisaromatic,with1HNMRshiftsareat6.4and7.4ppm.
(a)Aromatic
(b)Antiaromatic
(c)Aromatic
(a)meta
(b)para
(c)ortho
(a)1bromo3chlorobenzene,ormbromochlorobenzene
(b)2methylpropylbenzene,or2methyl1phenylpropane
(c)1amino4bromobenzene,orpaminobromobenzeneorpbromoaniline

20.10
Br
CH3

Br

CH3

CH3

Br

0bromotoluene
mbromotoluene
pbromotoluene

20.11 D2SO4sulfonatesthebenzeneringreversibly.Onsulfonation,anH+islosttothesolvent
(D2SO4).Ondesulfonation,D+addstothering.Sincethesolventfaroutnumbersthebenzene,
theHsarelostinaseaofDs.ThebenzeneendsupwithallHsreplacedbyDs.

20.12 (a)Nitrobenzene<toluene<phenol(hydroxybenzene)

(b)Benzoicacid<chlorobenzene<benzene<phenol

(c)Benzaldehyde<bromobenzene<benzene<aniline(aminobenzene)

120

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

20.13 Theproductsofelectrophilicbrominationofnitrobenzene,benzoicacid,benzaldehyde,
bromobenzene,chlorobenzene,benzene,toluene,phenolandaniline,respectively,are

20.14
(a)

Br

(b)

O
O
S

OH

(c)

CH3 O

S
O

CH3

(d)

OH

OH

+
O

(e)

OH

OH

OH

OH
O

+
O

OH

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121


20.15 OxidizingmchloroethylbenzenewithKMnO4producesmchlorobenzoicacid,
O

OH

Cl

OxidizingtetralinwithKMnO4produces1,2bezenedicarboxylicacida.k.a.phthalicacid,

OH

O
OH

20.16 (a)BrominatetolueneusingBr2+FeBr3
Separatetheorthoproduct,2bromotoluene
Nitrateusingnitricandsulfuricacidstoobtainthe2bromo4nitroand2bromo6nitro
products:

CH3

CH3

Br

Br

O
O

Separatethedesired2bromo4nitroproducte.g.usingdistillationorchromatography,or
maybeevenamolecularsieve.

(b)Nitratebenzenewith3equivalentsofNO2.

(c)Firstmakeanilinefrombenzene.
Nitratebenzeneusingnitricandsulfuricacidswith1equivalentofNO2
Reducethenitrobenzeneproductusinghydrogentogetaniline
Brominatetheanilinewith3equivalentsofbrominetogetthefullybrominatedproduct,
2,4,6tribromoaniline

122

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

REVIEWQUESTIONS

20.17 ManyskilledHuguenotsilkweaversanddyersemigratedfromFrancetoGermanyfollowingthe
revocationoftheEdictofNantes.Coaltarwasavailable,atthetime,asasourceofstarting
materials.TheRhineRiverprovidedthewaterneededtodothechemistry.

20.19 Nitratesareneededtomaketrinitrotoluene(TNT),animportantexplosive,fromtoluene.They
arealsousedtomakeotherexplosives(e.g.nitroglycerin)andasfertilizers.Duringtheleadup
toWorldWarII,theBritishcontrolledtheworldssupplyofnaturallyoccurringnitratesin
massiveguanodepositsinChile.TheGermansneededasyntheticsupplyofnitrates.Fritz
HaberandCarlBoschdevelopedaneffectivemeansofproducingammoniafromnitrogen(from
theair)andhydrogen.Theammoniacouldthenbeoxidizedtoproducethedesirednitrate.

20.21 Theplanararrangementof1,3,5,7tetramethylcyclooctatraeneproducesanantiaromatic
electronconfiguration.Itisdestabilizedwithrespecttosimplyhavingfourlocalizeddouble
bonds,asitdoesinthetubconformation.Thetubconformation,therefore,providesthe
observedlowestenergyconformation.

20.23

20.25 TherearethreenonequivalentHsinanthacenethecentralverticalpair,andtwopairs
(relatedviareflectionthroughtheverticalaxis)ofverticalpairsofHs.Thechemicalshiftsare
expectedtobeinthe6.5to8ppmrangetypicalofaromatics.

20.27 Phenanthrenehas14=43+2electrons.Althoughitisnotmonocyclic,itcertainlyqualifiesas
aromatic.Theouterringofatomsprovidestheprincipalpathoverwhich43+2electronsare
delocalizedinaccordwithHckelsrule.

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123

20.29

9
10

Theshortestbondshavethehighestorderlookforthebondswhicharedoublemoreoften
thantheothers.TheshortestCCbondistheC9C10bond(labeledinthefirststructure).Itisa
4
doublebondin4ofthe5structures.Itsbondorderis1 5 .

20.31 C8H9Brhas4degreesofunsaturation,consistentwithasinglephenylring(aringand3double
bonds).Thecompoundisoorpbromoethylbenzene,
CH3

CH3

Br

or
Br

20.33 The1,3,5,7tetramethylcyclooctatetraenedianionshouldbeplanar,asHckelsruleissatisfied
andtheplanarstructureshouldhaveaspecialstability.

20.35

Indolehas10=42+2electrons.Itisaromatic.

124

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

20.37 1,3,5,7cyclononatetraeneisexpectedtobeunusuallyacidicbecauseofthestabilizationofthe
anion.ItcanbeconvertedtoasaltbytreatmentwithastrongbasesuchasNaNH2.Thesodium
saltofthearomaticcationwouldbeformed.

20.39

CH3
HO

CH3

2(3hydroxyphenyl)propaneorm(1methylethyl)phenola.k.a.misopropylphenol
HO

OH
O

1,2benzenedicarboxlyicacida.k.aphthalicacid

20.41 (a)odinitrobenzene,mdinitrobenzeneandpdinitrobenzene
O

O
+

(b)1bromo2,3dimethylbenzene,1bromo2,4dimethylbenzene,1bromo2,5
dimethylbenzene,1bromo2,6dimethylbenzene,1bromo3,4dimethylbenzeneand1bromo
3,5dimethylbenzene
Br

Br

Br

Br

CH3 H3C

CH3

CH3

CH3

H3C

CH3
CH3

Br

Br

CH3

H3C

CH3

CH3

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125

20.43
Cl

Cl
Al

Cl

Cl

Cl
Al

Cl

Cl
H

Cl

H
+

H
+

H H

H
H
H

Cl
Cl
Cl
H
+

CH3

Cl
Al

Al

Cl

Cl
H

Cl

CH3

HCl

126

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

20.47

(a)
O

CH3

Br2 with FeBr3

CH3

Br

CH3

CH3COCl with AlCl3

CH3

+ HBr

Br

CH3
O

CH3

CH3

+ HCl

CH3

(b)
Theproductsofbrominationareobromomethoxybenzeneandpbromomethoxybenzene.The

productsofacylationareoacetylmethoxybenzeneandpacetylmethoxybenzene.

(b)

CH3

CH3

Br

Br2 with FeBr3

+ HBr

CH3

CH3
CH3COCl with AlCl3

O
CH3
+ HCl

Theproductofbrominationis4acyl2bromotoluene.Whilethemethylsubstituentiso,p
directing,theacylsubstituentismdirectingonlyoneproductisformed.Theproductof
acylationis2acetyl4acyltoluene.

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

127

20.49
ortho addition
O

CH3
Br

CH3

CH3
Br

Br

H
H

meta addition

CH3

CH3

O
H

CH3

O
H

Br

Br

Br

para addition
O

CH3

CH3

CH3

C
+

C
Br H

H
Br H

Br H

Inthecaseoftheorthoandparaadditionintermediates,oneoftheresonancestructureshas
thepositivechargeonacarbonatombondedtotheelectronwithdrawingacetylgroup.This
resonancestructureisdisfavored,makingthecarbocationintermediateslessstableinthecase
oforthoandparaaddition.Metaadditionisthefavoredpathway,bydefault.

20.51
O

O
Br

Br

Thecarbonyliselectronwithdrawing.Itleadstothemetabromination.However,becauseof
therigidrelativeorientationofthetwophenylrings,thiscorrespondstotwoproducts.

128

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

20.53

20.55 Diphenyletheranddiethylphenylaminereactfasterthanbenzene,whilechlorobenzeneand
benzoicacidreactslower.

20.57 (a)oBromotoluenecanbesynthesizedfrombenzeneviaaFriedelCraftsmethylation(i.e.treat
with1equivalentCH3ClandAlCl3)tomaketoluene,followedbybromination(treattoluenewith
1equivalentBr2andFeBr3)andseparationoftheorthoandparaproducts.Thisseparation
mightbeachievedbydistillation.

(b)2Bromo1,4dimethylbenzeneisobtainedifweapplyanotherFriedelCraftsmethylationto
theproduct,obromotoluene,frompart(a).Becausethefirstmethylisanactivatingorthopara
directing,whereasbromineisadeactivatingorthoparadirecting,the1,4dimethyland16
dimethylproductsareobtained.Afinalseparationstepisrequiredtoobtainthedesired
compound.

20.59 MethylatebenzeneusingCH3ClandAlCl3.NitrateusingHNO3andH2SO4togetoandp
nitrobenzene.Separatetheparaproduct.OxidizeitusingKMnO4toobtainthedesiredp
nitrobenzoicacid.
Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

129

20.61 (a)MethylatebenzeneusingCH3ClandAlCl3.
NitratethetolueneproductusingHNO3andH2SO4.Separatetheorthoproduct.
OxidizeusingKMnO4toconvertthemethylgrouptocarboxylicacid.

(b)MethylatebenzeneusingtwoequivalentsofCH3ClandAlCl3.Separatetheo
dimethylbenzenefromtheparaproduct.

SUMMARYANDCONCEPTUALQUESTIONS

20.63 Trimethylammoniumisadeactivatingsubstituent.Unliketheaminesubstituent,ammonium
hasnolonepairofelectronstoparticipateinthesystem,andprovideanadditionalresonance
structurestabilizingthecarbocationintermediatesassociatedwithorthoandparasubstitution.
Nitrogen,beingmoreelectronegativethancarbon,isotherwisesomewhatelectron
withdrawing.Moreimportantly,thepositivechargeontheammoniumsubstituentdestabilizes
thecarbocationintermediate.

20.65

(a)
CH3

HO

Cl

+
O

CH3
Cl

OH

(b)
OH
HO

OH

Br
O

Br

OH

(c)
HO

CH3

O
S

130

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

20.67
Cl
O
AlCl3

20.69
Br

Br

20.71 AdditionofHBrto1phenylpropenewithBraddingtothe2positiononpropyl
H

Br

H
CH3

CH3
H

AdditionofHBrto1phenylpropenewithBraddingtothe1positiononpropyl
-

Br

Br H

Br

CH3

CH3
H

H
+

Br
CH3

Br

C
CH3

H
CH3

CH3

CH3

Theextraresonancestructuresassociatedwiththecarbocationintermediate,inthecaseof
additionofBrtothe1position,stabilizetheintermediate,enhancingtherateoftheassociated
pathway,makingthe1bromopropylproducttheexclusiveproduct.

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131

20.73 (a)Inthefirststep,tolueneischlorinatedatthemetaposition.
(b)Inthesecondstep,tertbutylisoxidizedtomakecarboxylicacid.

20.75
H

Br

Br H

Br

H
O

Thecarbocationintermediateisdestabilizedbytheelectronwithdrawingnitrogroup.The
resonancestructurewiththe+chargenexttotheformally+chargednitroNatomisespecially
destabilized.

Br

Br H

H
C

Br

H
H3C

H3C

H
H

H
H3C

H3C

H
H

H3C

H3C

H
H
H
H3C

Thecarbocationintermediateisstabilizedbyanextraresonancestructure.AdditionofHBrto
themethoxycompoundismuchfasterthanadditiontothenitrocompound.

132

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

20.77
Cl
-

Cl
Al

Al Cl

Cl

Cl

Cl

CH3

Cl

Cl

H3C

CH3

H3C
+

CH3

CH3

CH3

H
H3C

CH3

C
H
H3C

CH3

CH3

H3C

Cl

Cl

Al Cl
Cl
H

H3C

CH3
CH3

HCl
H3C

Cl
Al

Cl

Cl

Theparaisthepredominantproduct

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

133

Chapter21

21.1

21.3

(a)2bromobutane
(b)3chloro2methylpentane
(c)1choro3methylbutane
(d)1,3dichloro3methylbutane
(e)1bromo4chlorobutane
(f)4bromo1chloropentane

CH3

(a)

CH3

(b)
H3C

Cl
H3C H C
3

CH3

H3C

CH3

(c)

Cl

Cl

CH3

(d)
Br

H3C

21.5

CH3

Br

(b)

H3C

CH3

H3C

HO

(c)

CH3

H3C

H3C

H3C

Br

PBr3

CH3

CH3

H3C

H3C

CH3

CH3
CH3

(d)

PBr3

CH3
Br

HO

Cl

HO
CH3
CH3

134

Cl

HCl

H3C

CH3

H3C

(a)
HO

Cl

H3C

CH3
SOCl2

CH3
H3C

CH3

CH3


Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

21.6

(a)
CH3

CH3
PBr3

CH3

(b)

H3C

CH3
H3C

OH
OH
HCl

SOCl2

H3C

Cl

H3C

(a)

(b)

(c)

LiI

Br

H3C
I

CH3
Cl

OH

H3C

H3C

CH3

(c)
H3C

21.8

Cl

CH3

Br

CH3

H
CH3

HS

HS

H
CH3
CH3

CH3

NaCN
Br

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135

21.9

(a)
H3C

NaOH

H3C
OH

Br

(b)
H3C

NaN3
Br

H3C

21.10 (a)Theratetriples.
(b)Therateincreasesbyafactorof4.

21.11

H3C
N

H3C

H3C
Br

H
NaCH3COO

H3C

N N

O
O

H3C

CH3

CH3

(S)-2-bromohexane

(R)-2-hexyl acetate

21.12

H
H3C

CH3

HS

H3C

Br
CH3

21.14

21.15

21.16

(R)-2-bromo-4-methylpentane

CH3
H
CH3
SH

4-methylpentane-(S)-2-thiol

(a)CN(cyanideion)reactsfasterwithCH3CH2CH2Br
(b)ReactionofIwith(CH3)2CHCH2Clisfaster.
CH3I>CH3Br>CH3F
(a)Noeffect
(b)HalvingtheHBrconcentrationhasnoeffect.However,doublingthetertbutylalcohol
concentrationdoublestherateofreaction.

136

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

21.17
H3C
H3C

CH3
OH

H3C

(S)-3-bromo-3-methyloctane

CH3

(R)-3-bromo-3-methyloctane

Br

H3C

HBr

CH3

+
H3C

(S)-3-methyloctan-3-ol

CH3

Br

21.18

HO

CH3
CH3

Br

CH3

(S)-2-phenylbutan-2-ol
CH3

H2O

+
H3C

OH
CH3

(S)-2-bromo-2-phenylbutane

(R)-2-phenylbutan-2-ol

21.19

(a)
CH3

H
H3C

CH3

H3C

Br

CH3
H

(b)
CH3
H3C

CH3

elimination

elimination

CH3
CH3 Cl CH3

CH3
H3C

CH3
CH3

CH3

(c)
H

elimination

Br

CH3

CH3

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137

21.20

(a)
CH3
Br

H3C

CH3

elimination
H3C

CH2

CH3

H3C

(b)
CH3

CH3

elimination

Cl
CH3

CH3

21.21 Rateoftheeliminationreactiontriples.

21.22 (a)SN2
(b)E2
(c)SN1

21.23
Br

Br
CH3

H3C

Mg

Mg + ether

CH3

H3C

Grignard reagent
Br
Mg
H3C

138

D2O

CH3

CH3

H3C

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

21.24
CH3
OH

H3C

Br

H3C

CH3

CH3

Mg + ether

Br

H3C

Mg

Br

CH3

H2O

H3C

Mg

H3C

CH3

CH3

PBr3

Br

H3C

CH3

REVIEWQUESTIONS

21.25 Methylbromideismanufacturedfrombromidesaltsrecoveredfromseawaterandmethane
theprincipalcomponentofnaturalgas.Itisalsonaturallyoccurringintheoceans,plantsand
soil.Methylbromidehasbeenusedasapesticide,orfumigant,intheagriculturalindustry.
Becauseitisapotentozonedepletingsubstance,itsusehasbeenphasedout.Alargenumber
ofalternativepesticidesareinuse,orarebeingdeveloped.Forexample,phosphineisusedto
fumigatefoodstorage,transportationandprocessingfacilities.Sulfurylfluorideand1,3
dichloropropenearetwootheralternativefumigantsusedtotreatfoodsandforestseedlings.

21.27
F

Cl

Br

2-bromo-2-chloro-1,1,1-trifluoroethane

Halothanehasalkylandalkylfluoride,chlorideandbromidefunctionality.

21.29 Morethan3800differentorganohalogencompoundsproducednaturallybylivingorganismsor
byforestfires,volcanoesorothergeothermalprocesses.Thesinglelargestbiogenicsourceof
thesecompoundsistheoceans.

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139

21.31 (a)SubstratestructureplaysanimportantroleindeterminingwhetheranSN1orSN2
substitutionreactionwilloccur.SN2reactionsareinhibitedbybulkysubstituentscompletely
sointhecaseofattackatatertiarycarbonatom.Thisisbecauseofthesterichindrancecaused
bythesubstituents.TheSN2pathwayismostfavouredinthecaseofprimarycarbons.SN1
reactionsarefavouredbysubstituents(unlesstheyareelectronwithdrawing)becausethey
stabilizethecarbocationintermediateofthismechanism.
(b)AbetterleavinggroupincreasestherateofbothSN1andSN2reactions.

21.33 (a)Br
(b)Cl
(c)I

21.35

H3C

H3C

CH3COO

H3C

O
H

Br
CH

3
CH3

21.37 (a)Therateincreasesbythefactor3/2.
(b)Therateincreasesbythefactor3/2.
(c)Therateincreasesbythefactor6.
(d)Therateincreases
(e)Theconcentrationofallspeciesishalved.Therateofreactiondecreases4fold.

21.39
(a)

Cl

H3C

>

Cl

H3C

>

H3C

Cl

H3C

CH3

CH3

(b)
H3C

Br

CH3

CH3

>
H3C

Br

>

CH3

H3C
Br

21.41 (a)ThisisanSN2reactionatatertiarycarbonatom.Itisstronglyhinderedandwouldsimplybe
tooslow.
(b)ThisisanSN2reactionataprimarycarbonthisisgood.Theonlytroubleisthathydroxide
isabadleavinggroup.
(c)Thisisaneliminationreactionatatertiarycarbonthisisgood.However,becauseHBris
theacidusedtodehydratethealcohol,thealkeneproductissubjecttoadditionofHBr.

140

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

21.43

CH3
CH3
H3C

CH3

CH3

H2C

NaOH

CH3

Cl
H3C

CH3
CH3

H3C

21.45 (a)Theratestaysthesame.

CH3

(b)Therateincreasesbyafactorof9.

21.47 (a)E2

(b)SN1

21.49

Cl
H3C

CH3

NaOH

CH3

H2C

CH3

H3C

H3C

CH3

SUMMARYANDCONCEPTUALQUESTIONS

21.51 Theoceanshavehighconcentrationsofhalideions.Theoceansarealsothelikelyoriginofall
life,andarestillnowbrimmingwithlife.Itisnaturalthatorganohalogencompoundswouldbe
formedthere,andformedtherefirst.Moreoverandthisislikelywhytheoceanshavebeenso
crucialtolifetheoceansprovideasolventsupportingvastlymorechemistrythanispossibleof
thelandsurface.

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141

21.53
(a)

HCl

Cl

(b)

OH

dilute H2SO4(aq)

(c)

HCl

Mg & ether
Mg

Cl

Cl

(d)

H2 & Pd catalyst

21.55 (a)1iodopropane
(b)butanenitrile
(c)1propanol
(d)UponreactionwithMginether,wegetpropylmagnesiumbromide.Subsequentreaction
withwaterproducespropane.
(e)methylpropylether

21.57
CH3
H3C

Br

1-bromobutane

>

H3C

Br
Br

>

1-bromo-2-methylpropane

142

H3C

H3C
CH3

2-bromobutane

>

H3C

Br
CH3

2-bromo-2-methylpropane

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

21.59
-

H3C

OH

NaNH2

H3C

H3C

OH

PBr3

H3C

Br

H3C

Br

H3C

H3C

CH3

21.61 E2eliminationreactionsyieldnonZaitsevproductsbecauseeliminationisfavouredattheleast
hinderedprotonvicinaltobromine(onthecarbonnexttothebromocarbon).E2elimination
followsaconcertedmechanismrequiringabasetoabstracttheprotonasthebromideleaves.

21.63 ReactionofHBrwith(R)3methylhexan3olyields()3bromo3methylhexane,becauseitis
anSN1substitution.Oncethecarbocationisformed,thestereochemistryofthestarting
materialislost.The(R)and(S)productsareequallylikely.

21.65
A

Br

NaOH
Br

C
KMnO4 & acid

O
OH

HO

+
O

OH

B
H2 & Pd

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143

Chapter22

22.2

22.3

(a)tertiaryalcohol.
(b)containsprimaryandsecondaryalcoholfunctionalgroups.
(c)primaryalcohol.
(d)secondaryalcohol.
(e)phenol
(f)phenol

OH

(a)
H3C

H3C

CH3

(c)

H3C

OH

OH

(d)

OH

H3C

OH

(b)

CH3

(e)

OH

(f)

Br

OH

22.4

22.5

22.6

(a)di(2propyl)ethera.k.a.diisopropylether
(b)cyclopentylpropylether
(c)4bromophenylmethylether
(d)ethyl2methyl1propylether
OHstretch:3320cm1(strong,broad)
aromaticCHstretches:3090,3070and3010cm1(sharppeaks).
alkylCHstretches:2950and2890cm1(broad).
COstretches:1020cm1(strong,somewhatbroad).
CCstretchesofthebenzenering:1500to1370cm1(threesharpones)
benzeneCHinplane:peaksat1080and1040cm1
benzeneCHoutofplanebends:730and700cm1
TheIRspectrumoftheproductshouldnotshowthestrong,broadalcoholOHpeakaround
3300cm1,orthestrongCOpeaknear1000cm1.Instead,itshouldshowastrongC=O
stretchingpeaknear1750cm1.

144

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

22.7

O
O

H3C

OH

NaBH4

H3C

CH3

O
OH

O
O

H3C

22.8

CH3

LiAlH4

OH

H3C

CH3

OH

Na

NaNH2

H
H3C

CH3

Wecannotmakecyclohexylethyletherbyfirstformingsodiumethoxide,thenreactingitwith
cyclohexyliodide.

22.9

bromoethane>chloroethane>2bromopropane>2chloro2methylpropane

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145

22.10
(a)

CH3

CH3

H2SO4

H3C

CH3
HO

H3C

CH3

CH3
H3C

(b)
CH3

CH3

HO

H2SO4
H3C

CH3

22.11

H3C

CH3

(a)
HO

CH3

CH3

CrO3

(b)
CH3

CH3
H3C

NaOCl

H3C
H
O

OH

(c)
OH

CrO3

146

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

22.12
(a)

OH

O
CrO3

(b)

OH

CrO3

H3C

H3C

OH

(c)

CrO3
CH3

H3C

CH3

H3C

HO H
O

22.13 OxidationofthealcoholsinExercise22.12withpyridiniumchlorochromate(PCC)givesthesame
productsinparts(a)and(b),andthealdehydeinpart(b).

22.14

OH
O

OH

SO3 + H2SO4

OH

NaOH high T

OH

OH

CH3

CH3Cl + AlCl3

CH3

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147

22.15

O
O
O

HO

H3C

Br
CH3
H

N
O

22.16

(a)

H3C

CH3

CH3

HI

H3C

H3C

OH

(b)

HI

OH

H3C

H3C

(c)

H3C
H3C

148

CH3

HI

H3C
H3C

CH3

OH
CH3

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

22.17

H
H

H
CH3

H3C

H3C

CH3

H
H

HO

H3C

CH3

HO

CH3

CH3

H
H3C

O
H

H
H

H3C

H
O

H
H

22.18 (a)2butanthiol
(b)2,6,6trimethylheptan4thiol
(c)3cyclopentenethiol

22.19 (a)ethylmethylsulfide
(b)tertbutylethylsulfide
(c)omethylthiophenylmethylsulfide

22.20 Tomake2butene1thiolfrom2butene1ol:
Youcouldtreat2buten1olwithPBr3tomake1bromobut2ene.
1bromobut2eneisthentreatedwithNaSHtomake2butene1thiol.

Tomake2butene1thiolfrommethylbut2enoate:
Firstreducemethylbut2enoatewithLiAlH4togetmethanoland2butene1ol.
2butene1olcanthenbeprocessedasabove.

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149

REVIEWQUESTIONS

22.21 Thehydroxylgroupsontheoutsideofcyclodextrinsmakesthemsolubleinwater,allowingthe
drugencapsulatedbythecyclodextrintobedeliveredthroughoutthebody.

22.23 Thearticledescribestheuseofcyclodextrinstoformaggregatesandgiverisetodispersed
systems(i.e.notsolutions)withmorecomplexstructuresfordisperseddrugdelivery.Such
dispersedstructureincludeemulsions,microandnanocapsulesandspheres,aswellas
liposomesandniosomes.
Sublingualliterallymeansunderthetongue,referringtotheadministrationofadrugthrough
dissolutionandabsorptionofatabletheldunderthetongue.Inthecontextofthiscasestudy,
sublingualmightbeusedasametaphormeaningundertheabilitytodetect(i.e.taste)bythe
tongue.

22.25 Sometypesofwoundsproduceunpleasantodours.Cyclodextrinshavebeenusedtotreatthis
problembyencapsulatingodourmolecules.Thisisinadditiontotheiruseinincreasing
bioavailabilityofantibioticstothewound.

22.27
(a) H3C

CH3

(b)

OH

O
CH3
O
H3C

H3C

(c)
H3C

OH

(d)

HO
H

CH3
OH

CH3

CH3
(e)

OH
O

CH2

150

CH3

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

22.29
OH

H3C

H3C

OH
CH3

1-pentanol

3-methyl-1-butanol
or 3-methylbutan-1-ol

CH3
H3C

H3C

OH

CH3
OH

H3C

2-methyl-1-butanol

2,2-dimethyl-1-propanol

or 2-methylbutan-1-ol

or 2,2-dimethylpropan-1-ol
CH3

H3C

OH

OH

H3C

CH3

CH3

3-methyl-2-butanol
2-pentanol

or 3-methylbutan-2-ol

CH3

H3C

OH

H3C

CH3
OH

CH3
2-methyl-2-butanol

22.31

3-pentanol

or 2-methylbutan-2-ol

H3C

CH3

H3C

CH3

CH3
1-butyl methyl ether

CH3
H3C

CH3

2-butyl methyl ether

2-methylpropyl methyl ether

H3C

CH3

H3C

CH3

tert-butyl methyl ether

CH3
H3C

CH3

1-propyl ethyl ether

H3C

CH3

isopropyl ethyl ether

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151

22.35 (a)singlet
(b)doublet
(c)triplet
(d)doublet
(e)doublet
(f)singlet

22.37
H3C

OH

H3C
H3C

22.39 (a)

CH3
OH

H3C

(b)

CH3
OH

H
HO

CH3

22.41

H3C

H3C

O
CH3

OH
CH3

LiAlH4

CH3

CH3
CH3
NaNH2

CH3CH2I

H3C

O
CH3
CH3

152

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

22.43
(a)
OCl in acetic acid

OH

(b)
OH
H3C

(c)

H3C

OCl in acetic acid

H3C

CH3
OH

CH3

OCl in acetic acid


CH3

H3C

CH3

24.45
H3C

H3C

CH3

CH3

HI
OH

H3C

HI

H3C

CH3

OH

H3C

H3C

H3C

H3C

CH3

CH3
H3C

CH3

HO

CH3
H3C

CH3
H3C

HI

CH3

HI

H3C

CH3

HO

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

OH

OH

153

H3C
O

CH3

CH3
H3C

H3C

H3C

CH3

CH3

OH

(a)

OH

HI

H3C

and

H3C

22.47

OH

HI

H3C

OH

H3C

PCC

(b)
O

CH3

HBr

OH

Br

CH3
CH3

CH3

(c)

1. LiAlH4

H2C
CH3

OH

H2C

2. H2O

CH3

CH3

H3C

OH

(c)
O

154

H
CH3

HBr

OH
CH3

Br

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

22.49
(a)
PCC
H3C

H3C
O

OH

H
H

(b)
H3C

CrO3

H3C
O

OH

HO

(c)
H3C

H3C

NaNH2

OH

Na

(d)
H3C

PCl3
OH

H3C
Cl

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155

22.51
(a)

KMnO4 & H2SO4


strongly oxidizing conditions
H

OH

CO2

HO

oxidation takes place at the benzyl


position - in addition to the alcohol
intermediates are stabilized by the
neighboring phenyl ring

(b)

H2SO4

H2 & catalyst
H

OH

H
H

PBr3

(c)

OH

Br

(d)
CrO3
H

HO

OH

(e)
PCC
OH

156

H
O

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

22.53

(a)

H3C

H3C

PBr3

Br

OH

(b)
H3C

CrO3

OH

H3C

OH

(c)
H3C

NaNH2

H3C
O

OH

Na

(d)
H3C

PCC

H3C

OH

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

157

22.55
(a)

OH
CrO3

(b)

OH

PCC

(c)
CrO3

CH3
H3C

H3C

H
HO

22.57

CH3
O
HO

(a)
OH

O
Na2CrO7

OH

(b)
H3C

SH-

H3C

H3C
H3C

Br

SH

(c)

SH

Br2

S
S

22.59 Aceticacid,pentane2,4dioneandphenolwillallreact,essentiallytocompletion,withNaOH.

22.61 OnlyaceticacidwillreactwithNaHCO3.
158

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

22.63 TheOatomsofthecrownetherwillcoordinateacation,holdingitatoneendofthemolecule
(thecrown).TobindCs+,onecouldpreparealargercrownetherbyaddingOCH2CH2Ounits.

SUMMARYANDCONCEPTUALQUESTIONS

22.65
CH3
H
H

OH

H
H

22.67 Williamsonethersynthesiscannotbeusedtopreparediphenyletherbecauseoneofthetwo
reagentsinWilliamsonethersynthesisisahalidewhichundergoesSN2substitutionby(inthis
case)phenoxide.ThetroubleisthatphenylhalidesarenotamenabletoSN2substitution.
Nucleophilicattackwillnotoccuratanaromaticcarbonatom.

22.69

HO

H3C

H3C

OH

H3C

H3C

H3C

H3C

cis

trans

ThecisisomerwilloxidizefasterwithCrO3thehydroxylgroupisaxialinthisisomer.

22.71

O
Cl

Cl

Cl

Cl

Cl

Cl

Cl

Cl

Cl

H2O

Cl

O
H

Cl
Cl

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

O
Cl

O
H

neutralize

159

22.73 Dehydrationreaction

O
H
H3C
H3C

H3C

CH3

H3C
H

CH3

H
H3C

H
H3C

CH3

R
F

H
H

22.75
OH
H2SO4

CH3

H3C

CH2

CH3

O
O

CH3

m-chloroperoxylbenzoic
acid

1. NaNH2

dilute HCl

2. CH3Br

OH

CH3

CH3

CH3

OH

22.77
Li

Li

160

H3C

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

22.79
CH3

OH

Chapter23

23.2

(a)2methylpentan3one
(b)3phenylpropanal
(c)2,6octandione
(d)trans2methylcyclohexanecarbaldehyde
(e)1,5pentanedial
(f)cis2,5dimethylcyclohexanone

23.3
CH3

(a)

H3C

H3C

H2C

Cl

(c)

CH3

(b)

(d)
CH3

(e)

(f)

H
CH3

CH3

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

161

23.4
(a)

OH

PCC
H3C

H3C

(b)
H3C

OH

LiAlH4

OH
H3C

PCC
H

(c)
CH3

H3C

KMnO4 & H3O+

H3C

23.5
(a)

OH
H3C

(b)
H3C

H3C

162

O
H3C

CH3

CH3

CH3

(c)

PCC

OH

PCC

CH

LiAlH4

O
H2SO4 & HgSO4

KMnO4 & H3O+

CH2

H3C

CH3

O
H3C

CH3

CO2

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

23.6

N
OH
H3C

23.7

CH3

OH
O
CH3

23.8

23.9

Cl

OH

Cl

Cl

OH

H
H

H
R1

R2

R1

O
R1

23.10

R2

R1

H
+

H
O
R1

H
O

R2

R2
H

O
H

R2

H
O

R1

R2

H3C
CH3

CH3
HO

(1equivalentofethanol)

(2equivalentsof

ethanol)

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

163

23.11
O
O

23.12
protection step

HO
O
H

OH

acid catalyzed
CH3

CH3

O
O

LiAlH4
O

OH

CH3

O
O

deprotection step
OH

164

OH

acid catalyzed

H
O

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

23.13
(a)

CH3

(b)
HO

CH3

OH

(c)

23.14

O
H3C

+
CH3

23.15

H2N

CH3

H3C

CH3

CH3

CH3

CH3

23.16
O

H3C

H3C
CH3

H3C

HO

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

CH3
CH3

165

23.17
(a)
H

H3C

Ag+(aq) & NH3(aq)

OH

H3C
O

H3C

(b)

CH3

H3C

H3C
H

Ag+(aq) & NH3(aq)

CH3

H3C

OH
O

(c)

Ag+(aq) & NH3(aq)

no reaction

REVIEWQUESTIONS

23.19 Functionalitiesexhibitedbypheromonesincludealkylchainsandrings,alcohol,aldehyde,ester
especiallyacetate,alkene,ketone,andetherespeciallyepoxidegroups.

23.21 (a)alkyl&amide(specifically,acetamide)
(b)alkyl&ester(specifically,acetate)
(c)alkyl,aromatic,aldehyde&carboxylicacid

23.23

166

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

23.25
O

H3C

CH3
H3C

H
pentanal

H3C
CH3

CH3
O

H3C
H

2,2-dimethylpropanal

2-methylbutanal

2-pentanone

3-methylbutanal

O
H3C

CH3

H3C

H3C

O
CH3

H3C

CH3

CH3
3-methylbutanone

3-pentanone

23.27 (a)3methylcyclohex3enone

(b)2,3dihydroxypropanal
(c)5isopropyl2methylcyclohex2enone
(d)2methylpentan3one
(e)3hydroxybutanal
(f)1,4benzenedicarbaldehyde

23.29

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

167

23.31
O
H
H3C

CH3
CH3

23.33

(a)
O

OH

NaBH4 , then H3O+


H

(b)
O

Tollens: AgNO3(aq) & NH3(aq)


OH

(c)
O

NH2OH

OH

(d)
O

H3C

Mg
Br

OH

H3O+

CH3

(e)
O

CH3OH, H+ catalyst

168

OH

O
CH3

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

23.35
(a)
O
CH3

H3C

HO

NaBH4 , then H3O+

CH3

H3C

nucleophile is H

H3C

(b)

Mg

HO

CH3

Br
CH3

H3C

nucleophile is CH3CH2

H3C

CH3

(c)
O

NH2CH3
CH3

H3C

N
H3C

nucleophile is NH2CH3

CH3

CH3

it adds to the electron deficient carbonyl carbon


water is eliminated in a subsequent step

(d)
O
H3C

CH3SH
CH3

nucleophile is CH3SH

H3C

OH

H3C

S
CH3

attacking with an S
lone pair

23.37 Thereactionofphenylmagnesiumbromidewithbutan2oneproducesaracemicmixtureof2
phenylbutan2ol.

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

169

23.39
CH3

H3C
O

(a)

HO

OH
CH3

H3O+ & catalyst

H3C

CH3

CH3

a hemiacetal
CH3

H3C
HO

CH3

O
CH3

OH

H3O+ & catalyst

H3C

CH3

H3C
O

H3C

O
CH3

CH3

an acetal

(b)

O
H3C

CH3

OH
H3O+ & catalyst

HO

H3C

CH3

a hemiacetal

HO
H3C

OH
H3O+ & catalyst

CH3

O
CH3

an acetal

170

O
H3C

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

23.41

O
O
R1
H

R2
N

H
N

R1

R2

H2O

N
H

R1

H
H

H
R1

H
O

R1

N
R2

R2
H

add another ketone with


the same steps
R1
N

R1
N

R2

R2

23.43
(a)

O
CH3MgBr
H3C

CH3

HO
H3C

(b)

HO

CH3
CH3

CH3

CH3MgBr

(c)
O
H3C

CH3

HO

CH3MgBr

CH3

H3C

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

CH3

171

23.45
(a)

HO

CH3MgBr
H3C

Mg
O
H3C

(c)

H3C

(b)

CH3

Br
HO
H3C

CH3

HO

CH3

CH3

CH3CH2MgBr

(d)
Mg

Br
HO

172

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

23.47
(a)
H3C

O
H

Mg

Br

CH3

(b)

H3C

CH3

HO

OH

Mg
Br

CH3

Mg
O

Br

HO

H3C

CH3

H3C

(c)
H3C

O
H3C

Mg

OH

Br
H3C

CH3

H3C

O
H3C

HO

Mg
H

Br

H3C

H3C

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

H3C

OH

H3C

CH3

H3C

this choice leads to an additional aldehyde product


which could then react with the Grignard reagent to
form yet additional products

173

23.49
(a)
O

add H2O

OH

OH

(b)
O

OH

O
add NH3

NH2

(c)
O

O
add CH3OH

H3C

(d)
O

O
add CH3CH2SH

174

CH3

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

SUMMARYANDCONCEPTUALQUESTIONS

23.51
(a)
O

1,4 addition product

OH

NaBH4 then H

separation is necessary
chromatography is the likely choice
distillation would be difficult on
account of the similarity of the two
products

concentrated acid

(b)
O

CH3

H2 & Pd

OH

CH3MgBr

(c)
O

H2 & Pd

NaBH4 then H+

OH

(d)
O

Mg

there may be a conjugate addition


product in addition to this one

Br
OH

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

the conjugate addtion product can


add another equivalent of
phenylmagnesium bromide

175

23.53
(a)

H3C

NH2OH

CH3

H3C

CH3

HO

(b)
NH NH2
H3C

CH3
O

H3C

CH3
N

N
O

(c)

H3C

CH3

CH3CH2OH & H+

H3C

CH3
O

HO

CH3

CH3CH2OH & H+

H3C

CH3
O
H3C

176

O
CH3

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

23.55 Thioacetalformationisanalogoustoacetalformation.Inthiscase,itisthioalsaddingtoa
ketoneratherthanalcoholsaddingtoaketone.

H
O

O
R2

R1

R1

R2
solvent
+

H
R3 S

H
O

R1

R3 S
R2

R1

H
R3 S
R2

R1

H
+ H
R3 S O

R2

R1

R2

R3 S
H
R3
R1
R3

R3

R2

S
R2

R1

R3

solvent

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

177

25.57
Mg
O

(a)
H3C

Br

H3C
H

H3C

CH3

HO

(b)
O

NaOCl
H3C

CH3

(c)
Br2 & FeBr3

Br

H3C
CH3
CH3
O

(d)

CH3

CH3OH & H

178

Br

H3C
CH3

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

23.59
(a)
1,4 addition products
H3C

OH

CH3

HO

CH3

H
HO

OH

H3C
OH
H3C

CH3

OH

CH3
HO

OH

CH3

H
HO

H3C

CH3

OH

1,2 addition products

H3C

OH

CH3

HO

CH3
H

HO

H3C

OH
H3C

CH3

CH3
HO

OH

CH3
H

H
HO H

OH

HO

OH
H3C

CH3

OH

H
H OH

(b) The 1,4 addition products are enantiomers. The 1,2 addition products are a separate pair of
enantiomers.

(c)Iwouldnotexpectthe1,4or1,2additionproductstoyieldinequalamounts.Althoughtheaddition
cantakeplacefrombeloworabovetheringstructure,thestereochemistryofthesubstrateatexisting
stereocenterscanaffecttherateofthesetwopathways.The1,4additionrequiresattackbyhydride
(carriedbyBH4)atacarbonwithtwoadjacentstereocenters.Theenantiomericexcessislikelygreater
forthe1,4additionproducts.

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

179

Chapter24

24.2

(a)
CH3

(b)

H3C

O
H3C

OH

OH

CH3

CH3

(c)

(d)
OH

OH
H

OH

24.3

HO

(a)
H3C

(b)

H3C

O
NH

Cl

H3C

H3C

(c)

H3C

(e)

H3C

(d)

CH3

H3C

H3C

CH3

H3C

CH3

(f)
NH2

24.4

O
O

H3C

CH3

(a)acarbonylstretchmostlikelyanesteroranaldehyde.
(b)C=Ostretchingband(therearetwo)ofananhydride.
(c)carboxylicacids.
(d)aketone(unlessthereisalsoabroadOHstretch24003300cm1)C=Ostretch.

180

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

24.5

(a)
H3C

CH3

1735 cm1 - an ester C=O stretch

(b)
H3C

CH3

H
1650 cm1 - an amide C=O stretch

(c)
O
H3C

Cl

1735 cm1 - an acid chloride C=O stretch

24.6

In13CNMRspectroscopy,thecarboxylicacidcarbonylcarbonwillabsorbaround180185ppm
andtheketonecarbonylrangeisfrom180220ppm.Also,4hydroxycyclohexanonehasa
hydroxylfunctionalityandwillhaveaCOcarbonabsorptioninthe5090ppmrange.Theother
alkylcarbonswillmostlyabsorbinthe1030ppmrangethoughthecarbonnexttothe
carbonyl(inbothmolecules)canbeasfaras50ppmdownfield.Inthe1HNMRspectra,the
moleculesaredistinguishedbypossiblesplittingofthehydroxylHpeakinthecaseof4
hydroxycyclohexanone,and(moreimportantly)bytheextradownfieldpeakduetothemethine
HCO.

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

181

24.8

(a)

O
OH

NaOCH3

CH3

(b)
H3C

H3C

O
KOH

H3C

H3C

OH

H3C

H3C

24.9 methanol<phenol<pnitrophenol<aceticacid<sulfuricacid

24.10 (a)CH3CH2CO2H<BrCH2CH2CO2H<BrCH2CO2H
(b)ethanol<benzoicacid<pcyanobenzoicacid

24.11 (a)CH3COCl>CH3CO2CH3
(b)CH3CH2CO2CH3>(CH3)2CHCONH2

(c) CH3CO2COCH3 > CH3CO2CH3


(d) CH3CO2CH3 > CH3CHO

24.12 ThefluorinesubstituentsinCF3CO2CH3areelectronwithdrawing,makingthecarbonylcarbon
moreelectrondeficient(attractingnucleophiles)andstabilizingthefourcoordinate
intermediatewhichhasadditionalelectrondensityduetothebondednucleophile.

24.13
(a)
O

CH3OH

H3C

H3C
O

Cl

(b)

CH3CH2OH
O

H3C

Cl

H3C

CH3

CH3

(c)
OH
O

182

H3C

Cl

H3C

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

24.14
O

H3C

H3C

Cl

Cl

H3C

H3C

N
H

N
H

H3C
N

H3C

H
H

H3C

Cl
H

N
CH3

Cl

N
H

H
H

24.15
(a)
O

NH3

H3C

H3C
NH2

Cl

(b)
CH3

H3C

CH3

CH3NH2

O
CH3

H3C

Cl

NH

(c)
H3C
O

NH CH3

H3C

H3C

Cl

CH3

CH3

H3C

(d)
O

O
NH

Cl

CH3

CH3

H3C

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

183

24.16

OH

OH

N
H

O
O

H3C

24.17

CH3

CH3

CH3

CH3

OH

OH

(a)

(b)

H3C

NaOH(aq)
OH

H3C

CH3

H3C

CH3

HO

O
O

NaOH(aq)
OH

CH3

184

CH3

H3C

O
H3C

CH3

24.18

OH

H3C

CH3

OH

H
H

H3C

OH

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

24.19
(a)
O
H3C

LiAlH4

CH3

H3C

OH

CH3

(b)

CH3

LiAlH4

OH

24.20
O
CH3

H3C

OH

CH3

(c)

CH3

H3C

O
H3C

CH3

Br

CH3

2 CH3MgBr

Mg
(b)

HO

OH
O

H3C

OH

O
O

(a)

H3C

Mg Br
O

CH3

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

CH3
H3C

OH

185

24.21
(a)

O
O
NH

(b)

CH3

H3O (aq) & heat

OH

O
LiAlH4

OH

OH

from (a)

(c)

O
NH

CH3

LiAlH4

NH

CH3

24.22

O
H
N

24.23 (a)CH3CH2CHOhasnoacidicHs

(b)(CH3)3CCOCH3isessentiallynonacidic.However,the3Hsonthemethylnexttothe
carbonylareslightlyacidic.
(c)TheHbondedtoOisacidicinaceticacid,CH3CO2H.
(d)ThemethyleneHsbetweenthetwocarbonylCsareacidicin1,3Cyclohexanedione.

186

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

24.24
(a)
H

H+

C
H

H3C

H3C

H3C

(b)
H

C
CH3

H3C

H3C

CH3

H3C

CH3

O
-

H3C

CH2

H3C

CH2

(c)
O

H+

CH3

CH3

CH3

CH3

CH3

CH

24.25
O

H3C

O
H

CH3

H3C

O
O

CH3

CH3

H3C

O
H

H
O

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

H3C

CH3

187

24.26
(a)
O
H3C

O
H

O
H3C

NaCH3CH2O

CH3

H3C

H3C
Br

CH3

O
H3C

H3C

CH3

C
H

O
C

O
-

CH3

CH3

CH3

O
CH3

HCl(aq) & heat


H3C

OH

(b)
O

Br

OH

(c)

CH3
H3C
CH3
H3C

Br

O
OH

188

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

REVIEWQUESTIONS

24.27
O

O
H3C

OH

H3C

CH3
OH

H3C

OH

CH3
hexanoic acid

4-methylpentanoic acid

3-methylpentanoic acid
chiral at C3

O
H3C

H3C

OH

CH3

CH3

H3C

CH3

3,3-dimethylbutanoic acid

chiral at C2

O
OH

H3C

2,3-dimethylbutanoic acid
chiral at C2

O
H3C

OH

H3C

OH

CH3
2-methylpentanoic acid

CH3

2,2-dimethylbutanoic acid

H3C

OH

H3C
2-ethylbutanoic acid

24.29 (a)pmethylbenzamide
(b)4ethylhex2enenitrile
(c)dimethylbutanedioate
(d)isopropyl3phenylpropanoate
(e)phenylbenzoate
(f)Nmethyl3bromobutanamide
(g)3,5dibromobenzoylchloride
(h)1cyanocyclopentene

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

189

24.31
(a)

H3C

Cl

H3C

hex-4-enoyl chloride

hex-2-enoyl chloride

cyclopentanecarbonyl chloride

(b)

Cl

Cl

O
NH2
NH2

H3C

H3C

hept-2,4-dienamide

cyclohex-1-enecarboxamide

NH2

hept-2,5-dienamide

(c)
H3C

cyclopentanecarbonitrile

(d)

CH3

methyl but-2-enoate

24.33 (a)

H2C

pent-3-enenitrile

pent-2-enenitrile

O
H3C

H3C

O
O

CH3

ethyl propenoate

H3C

ethenyl propanoate

CH2

Cl

H3C

(b)
O
CH3
H3C

24.35

190

CH3

(a)aceticacid<chloroaceticacid<trifluoroaceticacid
(b)benzoicacid<pbromobenzoicacid<pnitrobenzoicacid
(c)cyclohexanol<phenol<aceticacid

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

24.37

24.39 (c)CH3CONH2<(a)CH3CO2CH3<(d)CH3CO2COCH3<(b)CH3COCl

24.41
OH

24.43

HO

H3O+

Cl

Cl

Cl
O

O
H3C

H3C

H
Al
H

H3C

Al

H
H
Al

H
H

H
O

H
H3C

H
H

Al

OH

H3O+

H
H3C

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

191

24.45

(a)
Cl

Cl

Cl

R1 R2

R1
R2 Mg
Br

R2

R1

Mg

Br

R2 Mg
Br

OH

H3O+
R2

R1

R2

R1

R2

R2

Mg

Br

(b)

(a)
CH3

Cl
O

H3C

192

H3C
OH

H3C
O

(b)

CH3

CH3MgBr then H3O+

CH3
OH

Cl

CH3MgBr then H3O+

CH3

CH3

CH3
CH3

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

24.47
(a)

excess CH3MgBr in ether


Cl

then H3O+

O
H3C

CH3

H3C

OH

H3C

(b)
Cl

NaOH(aq)

O
H3C

O
H3C

(c)
CH3
Cl

HN

CH3NH2

H3C

H3C

(d)
Cl

LiAlH4 then H3O+

O
H3C

OH

H3C

(e)
OH
Cl

O
O

H3C

H3C

(f)
H3C

Cl
O

H3C

O
O

O
O

H3C

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O
H3C

193

24.49
(a)
CH3

excess CH3MgBr in ether

then H3O+

H3C

CH3
OH

H3C

H3C

Alternatively,startingwithmethylacetate,wecouldadd1equivalentofpropylmagnesium
bromide,then1equivalentofmethylmagnesiumbromide.

(b)

excess
Mg
CH3

Br
HO

CH3

O
H3C

Thealternativeistostartwithmethylbenzoateandsuccessivelyadd1equivalentof
phenylmagnesiumbromideand1equivalentofmethylmagnesiumbromide.

24.51
O

LiAlH4 then H3O+

HO

OH

HO

24.53

OH

HO

OH

Thefirsttwoenolsshownarethemoststablebecausethe2carbonHsaremoreacidicthey
aretotwocarbonyls.

194

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

24.55

(a)
O

O
-

H3C

O
CH3

H3C

O
CH3

H3C

CH3
H

(b)
-

H2C

H2C

(c)
O

O
H3C

CH3

H3C

O
CH3

H3C

CH

CH3

(d)
CH3

O
O
N

CH

CH3

O
-

CH3
O

24.57 Anenolateisabaseoranucleophileitisastabilizedcarbanion.Itcanreactbydonatinga
lonepairofelectronsthroughtheOatomorthroughthecarbon.Itreactswithelectrophiles.
TheneutralenolistheresultoftheenolatedonatingitselectronstoaprotonattheOatom.
Whileitisanacid,whenitdonatesitsprotonbacktoabase,itotherwisereactsthesameway
astheenolatei.e.donatingalonepairofelectronsthroughtheOatomorthecarbon.
Becauseitisneutral,whenitreactsinthisway,ittypicallyacquiresapositivecharge.In
contrast,theenolateisananiontypicallyreactingtoformaneutralspecies.Thereactionsof
theenolateareconsequentlymorefavourable(itismorefavourabletoformaneutralspecies
fromanion,thananionfromaneutralspecies)itismorereactive.

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

195

24.59
CH3
H3C
O
H3C

Br

O
-

CH3

H3C

CH3

H3C
CH3

O
H3C

O
-

CH3

H3C

Br
H3C

H3C

CH3

CH3

H3C
CH3

CH3
O

HCl(aq) & heat

196

H3C

OH
CH3

CH3

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

SUMMARYANDCONCEPTUALQUESTIONS

24.61
(a)

Br

Br
OH

SOCl2
Cl

H3C

Br

CH3
O
CH3

H3C

(b)

OH

SOCl2

Cl

NH3

NH2
O

24.63 Thisorderfollowsbecauseoftheincreasingbulkofthealkoxidesubstituentatthecarbonyl
carbon.Hydroxideaddstothecarbonylcarboninthefirststepofsaponification.Alarge
alkoxidesubstituentreducestheaccessibilityoftheelectrophiliccarbonylcarbontohydroxide.

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

197

24.65
(a)
Br

Mg

Br

Mg in ether

(b)

H3C

O
O

CH3

H3C

CH3
CH3

Mg
Br

CH3

O
(c)

O
H3C

Cl
CH3

198

AlCl3

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

24.67
O

(a)

OH
H3C

LiAlH4
OH
then H2O

H3C

(b)
O

O
OH

CH3OH & HCl


O

H3C

CH3

H3C

(c)
O

O
OH

SOCl2
Cl

H3C

H3C

(d)
O

O
NaOH
OH

H3C

O
then CH3I

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H3C

CH3

199

24.69
(a)
N

I
H3C

NH2

LiAlH4

NaCN

H3C

H3C
CH3

then H2O

CH3

CH3

(b)
Mg in ether

Br

Mg

H3C
Mg

Br

Br

CH3

O
H3C
O

24.71

CH3

CH3

H3C
O

Cl
-

H3C

Na

Na

CH3

H3C

Cl
+

H3C

200

H3C

H3C

Na
N

Cl

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

24.73

Br
CH3

Br

CH3

Mg

Mg in ether

O
1 equiv

O
Cl

CH3

H3C

CH3

CH3
CH3

24.75

Firststep
H

H
H

O
H

NH

NH

O
H

Polymerizationstep

NH2

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201

Theaminegroupattacksthecarboxylicacidonanothermolecule,extendingthechainby
anothermonomer.Thisprocessrepeatsmanytimes.
O
O
O

O
H3C

N
N

CH3

24.77
O

O
H3C

OH

>

O
OH

H3C
H

24.79

O
O
N

CH3
O

O
CH3

>

H3C

OH

CH3

OH
H3O+

CH3
OH

H3C

OH

HO

202

> HC
3

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

24.81

(a)
H
O

CH3

(b)

H
O

CH3

H3C
NH
CH3

N
H
O

N
H

CH3

H3C

NH2

CH3
N

(c)
O

O
CH3

N
H

CH3

(d)AtwofoldexcessofdiethylamineisrequiredbecausebothLSDanddiethylacetamideareproduced.

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203

24.83

Firststep

Hydrolysisofacetylatedenzyme:

204

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

24.85
(a)
O

1.

H3C
O

H3C

CH3

CH3
Br

2.

H3O

3.

(b)
O

1.

H3C
O

H3C

CH3

3.

1.

H3O

H3C
O

H3C

O
CH3

2.

H3C

Br

H3C

CH3

3.

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

CH3
CH3

Br

H3C

H3C

CH3
2.

(c)

H3O

CH3
CH3

205

Chapter25

25.2

25.3

25.4

25.5

25.6

(a)primaryamine
(b)secondaryamine
(c)tertiaryamine
(d)quaternaryammoniumsalt
TheintegralscorrespondtotheHscominginequivalentgroupsof2,2,2,2and3from
downfieldtoupfieldaccountingforthe11Hsinpethoxyaniline.Thetwodownfielddoublets
at6.7and6.6ppmareconsistentwithphenylHs.Moreover,thedoubletspointtoeach
otheri.e.thepeaksclosesttotheotherdoubletarelargerindicatingthattheyarecoupling
toeachother(coupleddoubletswellseparatedinchemicalshiftshowtwopairsofequal
intensitypeaks).ThisisconsistentwiththeexpectedcouplingoftheC2andC3(C1isthe
aminecarbon)phenylHsandtheequivalentC6andC5phenylHs(togiveintegralsof2,while
splittingtheneighboringpeakintoadoublet,ratherthanatriplet).AsOismore
electronegativethanN,thefurthestdownfielddoublet(i.e.at6.7ppm)likelycorrespondstothe
C3andC5Hs.Thequartetat3.9ppm(integratingto2)andthetripletat1.3ppm(integrating
to3)areconsistentwiththeethylgroupanalkylmethyleneandmethylgroup,withthe
methyleneHsdownfieldbecausetheircarbonisbondedtooxygen.Theremainingbroadpeak,
integratingto2,correspondstotheamineHs.Theirpeakisbroadenedduetohydrogen
bonding.
6peaks.ThemethylCpeak(CbondedtoanotheralkylC)shouldappearinthe1030ppmrange.
ThemethyleneCpeak(CbondedtoO)shouldappearinthe5070ppm.ThephenylCpeakswill
beinthe110150ppmrange,withtheCsbondeddirectlytoOandNfurthestdownfield.
(a)CH3CH2NH2
(b)NaOH
(c)CH3NHCH3
(d)(CH3)3N

CH3

CH3

206

HBr

Br

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

25.7

(a)

H3C

H3C
Cl

NH3

CH3

H3C

(b)
H3C
4

H3C
Br

25.8

NH3
H3C

Br

CH3

CH3

Br

25.9

H2N

CH3

Br

CH3

(a)

(b)

CH3
N

Br2

CH3

CH3

Br

CH3
CH3Cl & AlCl3

CH3

(c)

CH3

CH3
N

CH3COCl & AlCl3

N
CH3

25.10

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207

25.11

..

. N.
. .
N
H

25.12 ThepyridinelikeNismorebasicweseethenegativechargedensityappearingasaredpatch
intheelectrostaticpotentialmap.

REVIEWQUESTIONS

25.13 (a)Nmethylisopropylamineitisasecondaryamine
(b)(2methylcyclopentyl)amineitisaprimaryamine
(c)Nisopropylanilineitisasecondaryamine

25.15

H3C

(a)

(b)
N

H3C

CH3

O
tertiary amine
N
H

CH3

tertiary amine

N
N

CH3
an imine

CH3

N
H

secondary amine

208

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

25.17

(a)

(b)
H3C

NH

CH3
N

(c)
H3C

CH3

H3C

(e)

NH2

H3C

CH3

N
H3C

(d)

CH3

CH3
N

Br

25.19

CH3
O

CH3

H3C
O

NH2

25.21

(b)

(a)
NH

NH2

H3C

CH3

OH
CH3
(c)

(d)
H3C

H
N

CH3

H3C

H3C

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209

25.23
1
N

3
N

H2N

CH3

CH3

3>1>2

25.25 Trimethylaminehasalowerboilingpointthandimethylamineeventhoughithasahigher
molecularweightbecauseithasnohydrogenbondingHs.DimethylaminehasonesuchH.

25.27
CH3

CH3

H2SO4 then neutralize

OH
H
tropine

tropidine

note that the other position for the


hydroxyl corresponds to an
optically active alcohol

CH3

HO

OH

OH

HO

25.29

210

atropine

HO

CH3

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

25.31 Nitrationatthe2position:

H O

H
H

H
O

C
H

H
+

O
A

Nitrationatthe3position:

H
N

N
O

H
H

N
O

H
H
N

H
H

Thecarbocationintermediateinthecaseofsubstitutionatthe2positionhasthreeresonance
structures.Thecarbocationmorestableandthecorrespondingreactionpathwaymore
favourable.

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211

SUMMARYANDCONCEPTUALQUESTIONS
25.33

25.35 CH3CH2NH2ismorebasicthanCF3CH2NH2.Thefluorosubstituentsareelectronwithdrawing
theyreducetheavailabilityofelectronsatthenitrogenatom.

25.37 Triethylamineismorebasicthananiline.Thereactiondoesnotgointhedirectionindicated.

212

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

25.39
(a)
Br
H3C

NH2

NH2

H3C

Br2 (1 equivalent)

NH2

H3C

+
Br
NH2

H3C

Br

(b)
H3C

NH2

CH3I (excess)

H3C

H3C

CH3
+

CH3

(c)

H3C

NH2

CH3COCl & pyridine

H3C

NH

O
CH3

25.41 Diphenylamineislessbasicthananilinebecausethenitrogenlonepairispartiallydelocalized
overtwobenzenerings,ratherthanjustone.

25.43 pmethoxyanilineismorebasicthananilinebecausethemethoxygroupiselectrondonating.

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213

25.45

H
H

H
+

H
H3C
H3C

H3C

CH3

H3C

H
CH3

OH
H

H3C

H
H3C

CH3

choline

25.47 Stereocentersaremarkedwitharrowsbelow.Therearefourstereocenters,andassuchthere
are24=16stereoisomers.

NH2

O
O

H CH3
O H

H2N
N

H3C
O

NH
H

25.49

Theaziridinegroup,liketheepoxidegroup,isveryreactivebecausethebondsarestrainedby
thetightthreememberedringarrangement.

25.51 DEETisanamidethatcanbepreparedbyreactionofanamine,diethylamine,withacarboxylic
acid,mmethylbenzoicacid,liberatingwaterintheprocess.Inpractice,thisreactionislikely
bestcarriedoutbyfirstpreparingtheacidchloridefromthecarboxylicacid.

214

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

Chapter26

26.1

26.2

26.3

26.4

26.5

26.6

26.7

26.8

26.9

26.10

Be2+ismorepolarizingthanBa2+becauseitissmaller.
(a)Chromium(VI)oxidehasaverypolarizing+6chargedmetalcation,producingachromium
oxygenbondswithastrongcovalentcharacter.
(b)Becausechromium(VI)issostronglypolarizing,itisacidicoxide,dissolvinginwaterto
producechromicacid.Themoreweaklypolarizingchromium(iii)formstheinsolubleoxide,
Cr2O3whichisamphoteric.
2H2(g)+O2(g)2H2O()
H2(g)+Cl2(g)2HCl(g)
3H2(g)+N2(g)2NH3(g)
2K(s)+H2(g)2KH(s)
Theproductofthisreactionispotassiumhydride.Itisanionicsolid(atroomtemperature).Itis
averystrongbaseconsistingofK+andHions.Itissostronglyreactivethatisgenerally
distributedasaslurryinmineraloil.
2Na(s)+Cl2(g)2NaCl(s)(exothermicreaction)
NaClisacolourlessionicwithhighmeltingpoint.Itissolubleinwater.
(a)2Cl(aq)Cl2(aq)+2e(reactionatanode,Clisoxidized)
2H2O()+2e2OH(aq)+H2(g)(reactionatcathode,H2Oisreduced)

(b)2I(aq)l2(aq)+2e(reactionatanode,lisoxidized)
Samereductionreactionasinpart(a)
2Ba(s)+O2(g)2BaO(s)(exothermicreaction)
BaOisacolourlessionicsolidwithhighmeltingpoint.Itissomewhatsolubleinwater.
Wewouldnotexpecttofindcalciumoccurringnaturallyintheearthscrustasafreeelement
becauseitistooelectropositiveittooreadilylosesitsvalenceelectrons.Itoccursonlyinthe
+2oxidationstate.
(a)Ga(OH)3(s)+3HCl(aq)GaCl3(aq)+3H2O()
Ga(OH)3(s)+3NaOH(aq)Na3GaO3(aq)+3H2O()
(b)Ga3(aq)isastrongeracidthanAl3
(c)2.77L
3

Al(s)+3HCl(aq)AlCl3(aq)+ 2 H2(g)
3

Al(s)+ 2 Cl2(g)AlCl3(s)

Al(s)+ 4 O2(g) 2 Al2O3(s)

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215

26.11 InSiO2,siliconformsanetworkofsinglebondswithoxygeni.e.wegetacovalentlybonded
networksolid.ThemeltingpointofSiO2isthereforeveryhigh.ThebondinginCO2isalso
covalent,butCO2ismolecular.Theintermolecularforcesofattraction(dispersionforces)
betweenCO2moleculesareweakandareeasilybroken.Carbondioxideisgasatordinary
temperatures.

26.12 PbCl4

26.13 (a)
+

(b)exothermic

26.14

26.15

26.16 (a)F2canoxidizeCl(X=F,Y=Cl)forexample,whereas(b)Cl2cannotoxidizeF(X=Cl,Y=F).

26.17 (a)Z*(Ar)=+6.75;Z*(K)=+2.2;Z*(Cl)=+6.1
ThevalenceelectronsofArareheldverytightly.Incontrast,thevalenceelectronofK
experiencesamuchsmallereffectivenuclearcharge.Althoughthevalenceelectronsof
neighbouringClarealsoheldtightly,theeffectivenuclearchargeinthiscaseisnotquiteas
large.

(b)Z*(Ar)=+1.2;Z*(K)=+1.85;Z*(Cl)=+5.75
ThevalenceelectronofArisheldquiteweakly.Incontrast,thevalenceelectronsofCl
experienceamuchlargereffectivenuclearcharge.EventheKionsvalenceelectronsareheld
moretightly.

26.18 Theratioofthedensityofnitrogentohelium=7.00.

216

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

26.19 Whilexenonandkryptonhaveclosedvalencesandpsubshells,theydohaveopendsubshells
intheirvalenceshells.Theycanthereforeexpandtheirvalenceshellstoformbonds.
Nevertheless,thereisasizeableenergygaptothedsubshellsandsuchbondsarenotvery
stablebutcanbeformed.Inthecaseofneon,thevalenceshellhasn=2.Toformbonds,
neonwouldneedtousen=3shellorbitals.Thereisaverylargeenergygaptosuchorbitals,and
whileonecouldenvisionsuchbondstheywouldbeextremelyunstable,andnosuchbondshave
everbeenformed.

REVIEWQUESTIONS

26.21 (a)ThepropertiesofBeCl2,BCl3,AlCl3,TiCl4andFeCl3aretypicallycovalent,becauseofthe
smallsizeofandhighchargeofthecationswhichmakethemhighlypolarizing.Incontrast,K+
andAg+,whicharesinglychargedandnotsosmall,arenotnearlyaspolarizing.Thechloride
anionretainsitsindependentanionicformnexttothesecationstheassociatedcompounds
areionic.

(b)Al3+ishighlypolarizing,givingcovalentcharactertobondswithhalides.However,sincethe
smallfluorideionisrathernonpolarizable,AlF3isessentiallyanioniccompoundthebonding
hasverylittlecovalentcharacter.Itcontrast,chlorideandespeciallybromidearemuchmore
polarizable.BondsinAlCl3,andAlBr3havesignificantlymorecovalentcharacter.These
compoundsmorereadilymelttoformliquidsofmobileAlCl3,andAlBr3molecules.

(c)Singlychargedcations,K+,Ag+andNH4+,arenotverypolarizing.Theydonotattractwater
moleculesstronglyenoughtoholdthemascoordinatingligandsintheioniccrystallatticesof
KCl,AgNO3andNH4NO3.Incontrast,thepolarizingdoublyandtriplychargedcations,Mg2+,Fe3+
andCr3+,retaincoordinatedwaterligandswhentheirsaltsareprecipitatedfromaqueous
solutioni.e.theycrystallizeashydratedcompounds.

(d)ThesmallerLi+ionismorepolarizingthanthelargerRb+ion.Consequently,Li+holdswater
ligandsaboutitrathertightly,anditsmobilityinwateristhatof[Li(H2O)4]+ratherthanthatof
freelithiumions.Arubidiumionisinsufficientlypolarizingtodragwatermoleculesalongwith
it.Itsmobilityisthatofthefreecation.

26.23 (a)ThemolarenthalpychangeofhydrationofBe2+(2455kJmol1)isgreaterthanthatofBa2+
(1275kJmol1)becausetheformerismuchsmaller.
(b)ThemolarenthalpychangeofhydrationofFe3+(4340kJmol1)isgreaterthanthatofFe2+
(1890kJmol1)becausetheformerhasagreaterchargeitissmallertoosincethereisoneless
electrontoarrangearoundtheironnucleus.

26.25 Pb4+polarizesthechloridestosuchanextentthatthebondsinlead(IV)chloridehavesignificant
covalentcharacterandlead(IV)chloridecanexistasindividualneutralmoleculesinanonpolar
solvent.

26.27 224kJ.
Thereactionisendothermic.

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

217

26.29 rH=131.30kJ
rS=134.0J/K
rG=91.3kJ

1
26.31 Na(s)+ 2 F2(g)NaF(s)
1

Na(s)+ 2 Cl2(g)NaCl(s)

Na(s)+ 2 Br2()NaBr(s)

Na(s)+ 2 I2(s)NaI(s)

1
1

Allalkalimetalhalidesareionicsolids.Theyarecrystalline,brittle,dissolveinwaterandare
colourless(M+andXareclosedshellspecies).

1
26.33 Mg(s)+ 2 O2(g)MgO(s)

3Mg(s)+N2(g)Mg3N2(s)

26.35 Limestone,CaCO3,isusedinagriculture.Itisaddedtofieldstoneutralizeacidicsoil,toprovide
asourceofCa2+,anessentialnutrientforplants(andanimals).Sincethereisgenerallya
magnesiumimpurity,italsoprovidesasourceofMg2+,anotheressentialnutrient.Limestoneis
alsousedtomakelime,CaO,whichisusedtomakebricksandmortar.

26.37 1.3103kg

26.39 Becausetheequilibriumconstantfortheabovereactionissolarge,~107,itcanbeusedto
obtainmagnesiumhydroxidesolid(whereinmagnesiumionsareconcentratedinanionicsolid)
fromseawaterwithverysmallconcentrations.

26.41 Berylliumandberylliumalloysareusedinairplane(especiallyhighspeedplanes),missileand
spacecraftconstruction.Itisalsousedinhighenergyphysicsexperimentstomakewindows
andfilters.BecauseofitslowdensityitisrelativelytransparenttoXrays,forexample,yethas
thehighstrengthandstiffnessofmuchheaviermetals.Berylliumdustgeneratedin
manufacturingprocessesisverytoxic.Peoplebreathingthisdustoveraperiodoftimecan
developberylliosisaninflammatorydiseaseofthelungswhereinsufferersexperience
coughing,shortnessofbreath,feverandweightloss.

26.43 Iodinegetsreducedandborohydride,BH4,getsoxidized.

26.45
Cl

Al

Cl

Cl
Cl

AlCl4istetrahedral

26.47 (a)BCl3(g)+3H2O()B(OH)3(s)+3HCl(aq)

(b)110.5kJ

218

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

26.49

26.51

26.53

26.55

SiO2(s)+2C(s)Si()+2CO(g)
Si(s)+2Cl2(g)SiCl4()(TheSiCl4()ispurifiedbydistillation)
SiCl4(g)+2Mg(s)2MgCl2+Si(s)

Inthelaststep,themagnesiumchloridebyproductiswashedawaywithwater.Thesiliconleft
behindinthiswayisfurtherpurifiedbyzonerefiningwhereinanarrowcylinderofsiliconis
heatedandmeltedinonesegmentalongthecylinder.Theheatingslowlytraversesthelength
ofthecylinder.Impuritiesconcentrateinthemeltedsegment,leavinghigherpuritysilicon
behind.
(a)Si+2CH3Cl(CH3)2SiCl2
(b)83.5kPa
(c)12.2g
Ca(OH)2(s)+H3PO4(aq)CaHPO4(s)+2H2O()

rH=58.02 kJ
rG = 5.40 kJ

Thereactionisexothermicandslightlyproductfavouredunderstandardconditions.

26.57 5N2H5+(aq)+4IO3(aq)5N2(g)+H+(aq)+2I2(s)+12H2O()
E = 1.43 V

26.59 (a)
O

O
N

N
O

Twoalmostequivalentresonancestructurescanbedrawn,givingthetwoNObondsonthe
rightbondordersofabout1.ResonancestructuresshowingtheNObondontheleftas
anythingbutadoublebondarenotatalldominant.Thislatterbondisthusmoreofadouble
bond.Thisisconsistentwithitsobservedshorterlength.

(b)rS=141JK1
K = 141

(c)fH[N2O3(g)]=83.71kJ

26.61 rH==884kJ
rG=841 kJ

ThisreactionisproductfavouredrG<0anditisexothermicwhichmeansthatitisless
productfavouredathighertemperature.

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

219

26.63
F

F
S

S
F

F
ON(S) = +1

F
F

S
F

S
F

ON(S) = +6

ON(S) = +4

F
F

S
F

ON(S) = +2

F
F

S
F

ON(S) = +5

26.65 Anyspecieswithreductionpotentialgreaterthanthatofchlorine(i.e.>1.36V)canbeused.
Forexample,

F2(g)+2Cl(aq)2F(aq)+Cl2(g)

H2O2(aq)+2H+(aq)+2Cl(aq)2H2O()+Cl2(g)

PbO2(s)+SO42(aq)+4H+(aq)+2Cl(aq)PbSO4(s)+2H2O()+Cl2(g)
2 MnO4(aq) + 16 H+(aq) + 10 Cl(aq) 2 Mn2+(aq) + 8 H2O() + 5 Cl2(g)

26.67 ThereductionpotentialofMnO4(aq)is1.51Vunderstandardconditions.Sincethisisgreater
than1.44V,itisNOTpossibletooxidizeMn2+(aq)withBrO3(aq).

26.69
F
Br
F

26.70 190kJ

26.71 1.6 kg

220

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

SUMMARYANDCONCEPTUALQUESTIONS

26.73

P4O10(s) and SO3(g) are acidic oxidespotassium and sulfur are non-metals.
P4(s) + 5 O2(g) P4O10(s)
S8(s) + 12 O2(g) 8 SO3(g)
The acidic oxides react with water to form acidic solutions:
P4O10(s) + 6 H2O() 4 H3PO4(aq) phosphoric acid, which ionizes in aqueous
solution to form H3O+(aq).
SO3(g) + H2O() HSO4-(aq) aquated hydrogensulfate ions, which ionize in aqueous
solution to form H3O+(aq).

26.75

S2, Cl, K+ and Ca2+ ions are monatomic ions with the same electron configuration as argon.

26.77

In order of increasing basicity, we have CO2 < SiO2 < SnO2

26.79

(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)

26.81

(a)
Electrolysis of aqueous sodium chloride:
2 Na+(aq) + 2 Cl(aq) + 2 H2O() 2 Na+(aq) + 2 OH(aq) + Cl2(g) + H2(g)
(b)
Electrolysis of aqueous sodium chloride is not the only source of sodium hydroxide, or of
hydrogen. It is, however, the principle source of chlorine.

26.83

(a)

26.85

(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
(e)
(f)
(g)

26.87

Dry, inert powders are used to extinguish sodium fires. A class D fire extinguisher is required.
The worst thing you can do is put water on the fire, as the sodium will react violently with water.

2 Na(s) + Br2()
2 Mg(s) + O2(g)
2 Al(s) + 3 F2(g)
C(s) + O2(g)

2 NaBr(s)
2 MgO(s)
2 AlF3(s)
CO2(g)

Li(s) and Be(s) are metals


B(s) is a metalloid
C(s), N2(g), O2(g), F2(g) and Ne(g) are non-metallic substances.
(b) + (c) Li(s), Be(s) and B(s) are silver-white shiny, with metallic appearance. C is a black
solid (graphite) or a lustrous tansparent very hard crystalline material (diamond). N2(g), O2(g),
F2(g) and Ne(g) are all gases, colourless except for a yellow tinge in the case of fluorine.
2 KClO3(s) + heat 2 KCl + 3 O2(g)
2 H2S(g) + 3 O2(g) 2 H2O() + 2 SO2(g)
2 Na(s) + O2(g) Na2O2(s)
P4(s) + 3 OH-(aq) + 3 H2O() PH3(g) + 3 H2PO4-(aq)
2 NH4NO3(s) + heat N2O(g) + 2 H2O(g)
2 In(s) + 3 Br2() 2 InBr3(s)
SnCl4() + 4 H2O() Sn(OH)4(aq) + 4 H+(aq)

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

221

26.89

The amount of gas produced by heating 1.00 g A is


pV
(27.86 kPa)(0.450 L)
n(gas)
=
= 0.00506 mol
RT
(8.314 L kPa K 1 mol1 )(298 K)
Bubbling this gas through Ca(OH)2(aq) gives a white solid, C. This suggests the gas is carbon
dioxide. Carbon dioxide reacts in aqueous calcium hydroxide to form insoluble calcium
carbonate, CaCO3(s). CO2(g) is also a typical product in the thermal decomposition of
carbonates, suggesting A is a carbonate. The other decomposition product, B, would then be an
oxide. This is consistent with it forming a basic aqueous solution. If the gas were CO2, then the
mass of 0.00506 mol would be
0.00506 mol 44.01 g mol1 = 0.223 g
This leaves 1.00 0.223 = 0.777 g as the mass of the oxide. If we take the decomposition
reaction to be (M is replaced by M2 in case of a univalent metal, etc.)
MCO3(s) + heat MO(s) + CO2(g),
then the molar mass of MO(s) is determined to be
0.777 g / 0.00506 mol = 154 g mol1
Subtracting the molar mass of O leaves the molar mass of M,
154 g mol1 16 g mol1 = 138 g mol1
This is pretty close to the molar mass of barium. This identification is verified by the green
coloured flame, characteristic of barium. Also, the sulfate precipitate is characteristic of barium.
A = BaCO3(s)
B = BaO(s)
C = CaCO3(s)
D = BaCl2(s)
E = BaSO4(s)

Chapter27

27.1

27.2

27.3

27.4

(a)methylamine,CH3NH2,(b)methylnitrile,CH3CN,(c)azide,N3and(e)bromide,Brare
monodentateligands.
(d)enethylenediamine,H2NCH2CH2NH2and(f)phenphenanthroline,C12H8N2are
bidentate(specialcaseofpolydentate)ligands
NH4hasnolonepairsanddoesnotserveasaligand.
(a)[Co(NH3)3Cl3]
(b)(i)oxidationnumber:+3.coorinationnumber:6
(ii)oxidationnumber:+2.coorinationnumber:6
(a)2.0106M
(b)4.0106M
(c)5.0x104

222

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

27.5

(i)rG=67.2kJmol1

Theentropytermaccountsforthebetterpartofthisnegativechangeinfreeenergy.Thelarge
positiveentropyofthisprocessresultsbecause6ligandsarefreedwithonly3bidentateligands
takingtheirplace.

27.6

27.7

(ii)K=6.021011
Only1.0molofAgCl(s)willprecipitate.

H
H

N
H
H N
H

H
N H
H

3+

Co

O O

Br

N
H

dark violet isomer (A)

N
H
H N
H
O

H
N H
H

3+

Co
O

O O

H
H
Br

N
H

violet-red isomer (B)

[Co(NH3)5Br]SO4(aq)+BaCl2(aq)[Co(NH3)5Br]Cl2(aq)+BaSO4(s)

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

223

27.8

(a)
H

Cl

2+

Fe

H
H N
H

Pt

Br

H
N H
H

2+

2+

N
H

N O
H
H N
H

2+

Co

H
N H
H

H
N

H
H N
H

2+

Co

H
H
O
N
O

O N

O
O

N
O

N
Cl
2+

Co

H N

O N

(d)

(c)

Pt

Br

H
N H
H

2+

(b)
H

Cl

Fe

Cl
Cl

H
N H
H

H
H

N
H
H N
H

Cl

H
Cl

224

Cl

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

27.9

(a)cisandtransisomers
(b)noisomers
(c)noisomers
(d)twoenantiomers
(e)noisomers
(f)noisomers

27.10 (a)[Fe(en)3]2hasastereocenteratFe2givingrisetotwoenantiomers.
(b)Thecobaltionintrans[Co(en)2Br2]isastereocenter,givingrisetotwoisomersthecisand
transspecies.
(c)Thecobaltioninfac[Co(en)(H2O)Cl3]isastereocenter,givingrisetotwoisomersthefac
andmerspecies
(d)Theplatinumionin[Pt(NH3)(H2O)(Cl)(NO2)]isastereocenter.Forexample,theNH3ligand
canbetranstoanyoftheotherthreeligands.

27.11 [Ti(OH2)6]3+<[Ti(NH3)6]3+<[Ti(CN)6]3

27.12 (a)In[Ru(H2O)6]2,Ru2isinthe+2oxidationstate.

dx2 - y2 dz2

dx2 - y2 dz2

dxy

dxz

dyz

dxy

dxz

dyz

low spin

high spin

diamagnetic

paramagnetic

(b)In[Ni(NH3)6]2,Ni2isinthe+2oxidationstate.

dx2 - y2 dz2

dxy

dxz

dyz

low spin
paramagnetic

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

225

27.13
(c)

(a)

dx2 - y2 dz2

dx2 - y2 dz2

dxy

dxz

dxy

dyz

dxz

paramagnetic

paramagnetic

[Mn(CN)6]45 d electrons

[Fe(H2O)6]3+5 d electrons

(d)

(b)

dx2 - y2 dz2

dx2 - y2 dz2

dxy

dxz

dxy

dyz

dxz

dyz

paramagnetic

diamagnetic
[Co(NH3)6]3+6 d electrons

dyz

[Cr(en)3]2+ d electrons

REVIEWQUESTIONS

Fe2andCo3
27.15 (a)[Ar]3d6
(b)[Ar]3d10 CuandZn2
Mn2andFe3
(c)[Ar]3d5
CoandNi2
(d)[Ar]3d8

Cr2 O3 s + 2 Al s
Al2 O3 s + 2 Cr s
27.17 (a)

(b)

TiCl4 (l) + 2 Mg(s)


Ti(s) + 2 MgCl2 (s)

(c)

(d)

2 Ag CN 2 aq + Zn s
2 Ag s + Zn CN 4
3 Mn 3O 4 s + 8 Al s
9 Mn s + 4 Al2 O3 s

aq

27.19 [Cr(en)2(NH3)2]3+

27.21 First,dissolveaknownamountofCrCl3inaknownvolumeofwater.Thisprocessisrepeated
severaltimes,exceptthatsodiumchlorideisalsoaddedtothesolution.Theresultingsolutions
allhavethesame(known)totalconcentrationofCr3+,anddifferent(known)total
concentrationsofchloride.ExcessAgNO3(aq)isthenaddedtoeachofthesesolutions.There
willbeaprecipitateofsilverchloride.Afterfiltering,dryingandweighingtheprecipitate,we
226

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

candeterminehowmuchchloridewasavailableforprecipitationineachsolution.Sincethe
totalamountofchlorideisknownforeachsolution,wecandeterminetheamountofchloride
thatwasnotavailableforprecipitationineachcase.Thisistheamountofchloridethatwas
partofthecomplex.Sincethetotalconcentrationofchromiumisknownineachcase,wenow
knowtheratioofchromiumtocomplexboundchlorideforeachsolution.Thesevaluesarethen
plottedagainstfreechlorideconcentrationdeterminedbytheamountofprecipitate.Thisplot
shouldshowwholenumberplateausinrangesofchlorideconcentrationsdeterminedbythe
successiveformationconstantsforthevariousspecies.Weshouldbeabletoidentifytheranges
thatcorrespondto[Cr(H2O)6]3+,[Cr(H2O)5Cl]2+and[Cr(H2O)4Cl2]+.Thesecorrespondto0,1and2
boundchlorideperchromium.Accordingtotheinformationgiven,weneedtoadddiethylether
toobtain[Cr(H2O)3Cl3].Thus,anadditionalexperimentwhereindiethyletherisaddedtoa
solutionfromtheexperimentdescribedbeforetheprecipitationreactioninordertoobtain
theneutralcomplexspecies.Theneutralcompoundwillpartitionintothediethyletherlayer.It
canbeseparatedoff,andtheneutralcomplexcanbeobtainedbyevaporatingtheether.Also,
oncethesolutionswithspecificchargedspeciesareidentified,wecanevaporatethewaterand
crystallizethedistinctionicsolidcompounds.

27.23

27.25

(a)5.0x1011
(b)250
(c)3.1105M

Complex
Kf also known
as

Co2
7.7 104

Ni2
5.6 108

Cu2
6.8 1012

Zn2
2.9 109

HereweseetheorderCo2+<Ni2+<Cu2+>Zn2+forthestabilityoftheamminecomplexes.
ThisisconsistentwiththeIrvingWilliamsseries.

27.27 Twostereoisomerscisandtrans.

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

227

27.29
H

2+

O
H
H N
H
N
H

Co

Cl

H H

H H
N

N
H

Cl

H
H
N

2+

H
H N
H

Co

N
H

N
H
H N
H
Cl

2+

Co

H H

H H
N

H H
N
2+

Co

N
H

Cl

H H
enantiomers

27.31

(a)

H
H

Cl

N
Cl

Cl

Cr

2+

Cl

228

fac

N
H

Cr

H
Cl

2+

H
Cl

mer

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

(b)
-

Br

Cl

N
H
N

Cr

H
Cl

2+

N
H

H
N
H

H
Cl

Cr
Br

H
Cl

cis-mer

2+

trans-mer

(c)
H
H

H
H

H
N

H
N

Cr

2+

N
H

H
HN

H
N

Cr

2+

N
H

trans-fac

cis-fac
H

N
N
H
N

Cr

2+

N
H

H
N

H
mer

27.33 AtransisomerwouldrequiretheNatomstobeonoppositesidesoftheplatinum.The
CH2CH2linkbetweentheNatomsisnotlongenoughtoallowthis.

27.35 (a)False

(b)False

(c)True

(d)False

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

229

27.37
d2

x - y2

d2
z

dx2 - y2 dz2

dxy

dxz

dxy

dyz

[Cr(CN)6]44 d electrons

dyz

[Cr(SCN)6]44 d electrons

low spin complex

dxz

high spin complex

SCNislowerinthespectrochemicalseriesthanCN.Itdoesnotsplitthedorbitalenergiesas
muchascyanide.

27.39
(a)

(c)

dxy

dxz

dxy

dyz

[FeCl4]26 d electrons

[MnCl4]25 d electrons

4 unpaired electrons

5 unpaired electrons

(d)

(b)
dxy

dxz

dyz

dx2 - y2 dz2

230

dyz

dx2 - y2 dz2

dx2 - y2 dz2

dxz

dxy

dxz

dyz

dx2 - y2 dz2

[CoCl4]27 d electrons

[ZnCl4]210 d electrons

3 unpaired electrons

0 unpaired electrons

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

27.41 (a)6

(b)Octahedral
(c)+3
(d)0
(e)diamagnetic
(f)
H

Cl

3+

Cl

H H
N

Co

H
H N
H
H N

N
H

Cl

N
H

N
H
H N
H
Cl

3+

Co

3+

Cl

Cl

H
H H
N
3+

Co

H
H N

H H

N
H

H H
N

Co

H
H H
N

Cl

H H

N
H

Cl

enantiomers

27.43 Hexaaquairon(II)isparamagneticbecauseitisahighspincomplexwith4unpairedelectrons.
WhenNH3isaddedtothesolutiontheammmoniacomplexisformed.Thiscomplexis
diamagneticitisthelowspincomplexwithnounpairedelectrons.

27.45 Lowspin:nounpairedelectrons.

Highspin:4unpairedelectrons.

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

231

SUMMARYANDCONCEPTUALQUESTIONS

27.47
Cl

Cl

N
Cl

3+

Cl

Co

Cl
-

H
N H
H

3+

H N
H
Cl

Co

N
H

N
H

H
H N
H
H N
H
H

cis-tetraamminedichlorocobalt(III) chloride

27.49

trans-tetraamminedichlorocobalt(III) chloride

(a)+2
(b)6
(c)1
(d)Paramagnetic

27.51 (a)K=5.792106

(b)productfavoured
(c)Becausethereactionisexothermic(rH==160.8kJ),itislessproductfavouredathigher
temperatures.Consequently,itispossibletousethisreactiontopurifynickelmetal.
Specifically,onewouldreactimpurenickelwithcarbonmonoxideatordinaryorevenlow
temperature,wheretheproductishighlyfavoured.Thegaseousproductiscollected,then
raisedintemperaturetoreversethereactionanddepositpurenickel.

Chapter28

Therearenoinchapteranswersnecessaryforthischapter.

REVIEWQUESTIONS
28.1

EachMgatomhas12sand32pvalenceshellorbitals.Thus,thereare4Nmolecularorbitals
formedfromthevalenceorbitalsofNMgatoms.EachMgatomcontributes2valence
electrons,whileeachmolecularorbitalcanaccommodate2electrons.Thus,oftheavailable
molecularorbitalsarefilledwithelectrons.

28.3

(a)Metalatomsthatcanformasolidsolutioniniron,asinterstitialatoms,mustbesmallerthan
ironatoms.Ironatomshavearadiusof156pm.Aluminumatomshavearadiusof118pm.
TheseareconsiderablysmallerthanFeatoms,andmightoccupyinterstitialsitesinasolid
solutionwithiron.

232

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

(b)Metalatomsthatcanformasolidsolutioniniron,assubstitutionalatoms,mustbesimilar
insizetoironatoms,andhavesimilarelectronegativity.Neighbouringelementsinthesame
periodasironhavesimilarsizeandsimilarelectronicproperties.Thus,Mn(radius=161pm)or
Co(radius=152pm)mightbeexpectedtoformsuchsolidsolutions.

28.5 The band gap of GaAs is 140 kJ mol1. The energy gap for an individual electron is this energy
divided by Avagadros numberi.e., 140 kJ mol1 / 6.022 1023 = 2.32 1022 kJ =
2.32 1019 J (per photon)
The maximum wavelength of light that can excite a transition across the band corresponds to the
minimum frequency that can do so. This corresponds to photon energy equal to the band gap.
Eg = h = h c /
So,
= h c / Eg = 6.626 1034 J s 2.998 108 m s1 / 2.32 1019 J = 8.54 107 m =
854 nm
This corresponds to light in the near infrared region of the electromagnetic spectrum.
28.7 Pyrex,orborosilicateglass,ismadebyaddingboronoxidetothemelt.Theglassthatresults
uponrapidcooling(slowcoolingproducesopaqueceramicmaterials)hasalowerthermal
expansioncoefficient(i.e.,foragivenincreaseintemperatureitsdegreeofexpansionisless)
thanordinaryglass.Thermalexpansion(orcontractionuponcooling)causesstrainsinordinary
glassthatcancauseittobreak.Thisisaproblemforglassthatisheatedinanoven.

28.9 (a)Hydroplasticityisthepropertyofmaterialsthatbecomeplasticwhenwaterisaddedto
them.Clayshavethisproperty.Whenwet,theyarereadilydeformedintoalmostanydesired
shape.Theyretainthisshapeafterdeformation,allowingthewetclaytobeheatedinan
oveni.e.,firedtomaketheshapefirmandrigid.

(b)Arefractorymaterialcanwithstandveryhightemperatureswithoutdeformation.Theyalso
havelowthermalconductivities,makingthemusefulforthermalinsulationespeciallyunder
hightemperatureconditions.Forexample,thespaceshuttleusesrefractoryceramictilesinits
heatshieldtoprotectagainsttheextremetemperatureconditionsofreentry.TheColumbia
spaceshuttledisasterresultedfromamissingheatshieldtile.

SUMMARYANDCONCEPTUALQUESTIONS

28.11

To operate a 700 W microwave oven, we would need N cells of the type described in 28.10,
where
700 W = N 0.0925 0.25 W = N 0.0231 W,
accounting for the 25% efficiency, i.e.,
N = 700 / 0.0231 = 30300 cells required.
The total area of the solar panel = 30300 cm2 = 3.03 m2.

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

233

28.13

In Table 28.1 of the text, the composition of pewter is given as 91% Sn, 7.5% Sb, 1.5% Cu. To
get the density of pewter requires knowing the arrangement of the atoms and appropriate values
for the atomic radii. Here, we will assume that the atoms are arranged pretty much the way they
are in the bulk elements. We will calculate the density of pewter as a weighted average of the
densities of the constituent elements. From www.webelements.com we get the bulk element
densities:
Sn
7310 kg m3
Sb
6697 kg m3
Cu
8920 kg m3
From these densities, we get
0.91 7310 + 0.075 6697 + 0.015 8920 kg m3 = 7288 kg m3
as the approximate density of pewter.

28.15 Whilehydrogenbondingisusuallystrongerthandispersionforces(locally),wecannotmakea
blanketstatementthathydrogenbondingisalwaysstronger.Dispersionforcesincreasewith
thesizeofthemoleculesinvolvedand,morespecifically,withthenumberofelectrons.Thisis
whyiodine,anonpolardiatomicmolecule,isasolidatnormaltemperature.Iodineatomshave
manymoreelectronsthanOatomsandespeciallyHatoms,andtheyaremuchfurtherfromthe
nucleussoaremuchmorepolarizable.Thedispersionforcesbetweeniodinemoleculesare
consequentlysubstantialeven,basedontheevidenceoftheirphasesatambienttemperature,
moreeffectivethanthehydrogenbondingnetworksinwater.

Chapter29

29.1

(a)Threoseisanaldobutose
(b)Ribuloseisaketopentose
(c)Tagatoseisaketohexose
(d)2deoxyriboseisanaldopentose

29.2

O
HO

234

H
OH

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

29.3

CH3
H

Cl

CH3

CH3

Cl

H
CH3

(S)-2-chlorobutane

29.4

(R)-2-chlorobutane

(a)

(b)
NH2

(c)
H

HO

H3C

H3C

H3C
O

(a)

CH3

(b)

HO

HO

HO

HO

OH

OH
OH

D-sugar

D-sugar

(b)

OH

HO

OH

OH
H
OH

D-sugar

L-sugar

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited


OH

(c)

HO

OH

OH

L-sugar

(a)

OH

(c)

OH

OH

29.6

OH

29.5

O
H
HO

OH
H
OH
L-sugar

235

29.7

OH
HO
H

29.9

OH

H
OH H

OH

OH

HO

OH

O
H HO

HO
H
H

OH

H
OH

OH

OH

HO
OH

O OH
H H OH

HO

OH

HO

HO

OH
H

O
O

HO
H

OH

-D-fructopyranose

-D-fructopyranose

29.11

29.13

OH

O
H H OH

OH

-D-fructofuranose

-D-fructofuranose

OH
O
HO

CH3

NH2
N
HO
O

OH

O
O

236

N
O

HO

NH
NH2

HO

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

29.15

DNAsequence3CCGATTAGGCA5iscomplementarytoGGCTAATCCGT(bydefaultthis
is5to3).Arranged5to3,thissequenceisACGGATTAGCC.

29.17

RNAsequence3CUAAUGGCAU5orUACGGUAAUCiscomplementarytoDNA
sequenceGATTACCGTA.

29.19 (a)Ala,alanine,iscodedbyGCU,GCC,GCAorGCG
(b)Phe,phenylalanine,iscodedbyUUUorUUC.
(c)Leu,leucine,iscodedbyUUA,UUG,CUU,CUC,CUAorCUG
(d)Tyr,tyrosine,iscodedbyUAUorUAC.

29.21 mRNAbasesequenceAUCGGUgivesrisetotRNAsequence,ACCGAU.

REVIEWQUESTIONS

29.23 (a)
O
H

OH

OH

HO

HO

H
OH

(b)ThisisanLsugarsocalledbecausethehydroxylonthebottomcarbon
stereocenterisontheleftinthisFischerprojection.

(c)

OH

O
H

H
H

OH

29.25

OH OH

OH

OH

HO

HO

H
OH

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

237

29.27 AscorbicacidhastheLconfigurationatthecarbonnexttotheprimaryalcohol.

29.29
(a)Amonosaccharideisasimplecarbohydrateconsistingofasinglechainpolyhydroxyl
ketoneoraldehyde.(e.gDmannose)

O
HO
HO
H
H

(b)

OH

OH

H
H
OH
OH

OH

OH
O
OH HO
H
H
H
H

e.g.Dmannofuranosetheanomericcenterisindicatedbythearrow
(c)TomakeaFischerprojection,weconstructtheconformationofthecarbonchain
arrangedverticallysuchthatallCCbondspointintothepaper.Todothis,weimagine
thatthecarbonchainwhichotherwisecurlsintoaspiralisflattenedontotheplaneof
thepapertheothersubstituentsonthechainpointabovetheplaneofthepaper.
Thesebondsaredrawnashorizontallines.Theexactstereochemistryispreservedin
theFischerprojection.
O
H
H
H

OH
OH
OH
OH

(d)Aglycosideistheacetalformedfromamonosaccharideandanalcohol.Thealcohol
isfrequentlyanothermonosaccharide.
OH

OH

H
O
OH HO

H
H

OH

OH
O
OH HO
H
H
H
H

(e)ReducingsugarsaresugarsthatcanbereducedbyTollensreagentabasicaqueous
solutionofAgNO3.Suchsugarsarealdosesintheiropenchainform.Theringformis
alsoreducingbecauseitcanopenupunderbasicconditions.
238

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition


(f)Pyranoseformisthesixmemberedringformofanaldohexoseanaldehydewith6
carbons.
OH

O H

H
H

H
OH

HO
OH

e.g. - D-allopyranose

OH

(g)A1,4linkisaglycosidiclinkagebetweenC1ofonesaccharideandC4ofanother
saccharide.

(h)ADsugarhastheDconfigurationatthecarbonnexttotheprimaryalcohol.
O
HO
HO
H
H

H
H
OH
OH
OH

29.31

29.33

e.g.Dmannose.

DalloseandLalloseareenantiomers.Intheirpureforms,theyhavethesamevaluesof
allphysicalpropertiesexceptspecificrotation.Thus,theyhavethesame(a)melting
point,(b)solubilityinwater,and(d)density.
(c)Thespecificrotationsareequalinmagnitudebutoppositeinsign.

(a)

Br
H3C
H

(b)

H3C

CH3

CH3

H NH2

29.35 28%Dgalactopyranoseand72%Dgalactopyranose

29.37 Weseethatalanine,leucine,andphenylalaninehavenonpolarRgroups.Serineandaspartic
acidhavepolarRgroups.TheRgroupoflysineisanonpolarchainwithapolarend.

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

239

29.39

Tripeptide serine-leucine-valine:

29.41

(a) The amino acid sequence in the protein is its primary structure.
(b) The way different peptide chains in the overall protein are arranged with respect to one
another is the quaternary structure.
(c) The way the polypeptide chain is folded, including how amino acids which are far apart in the
sequence end up in the overall molecule, is the tertiary structure.
(d) The way the amino acids near one another in the sequence arrange themselves is the
secondary structure.

29.43

(a) Sugar ribose:

(b) Nucleoside adenosine:

(c) Nucleotide adenosine 5-monophosphate:

29.45

ATGC and CGTA are not the same molecule. The nucleosides are differently arranged when
connected at the 5 and 3 positions to phosphate.

29.47

(a) Transcription is the process wherein mRNA is produced complementary to a strand of DNA.
The first step is the unwinding of the DNA double helix. An RNA strand complementary to a
DNA strand is synthesized, next to the DNA strand. The RNA strand is then unwound from the
DNA. It goes on to protein synthesis. The DNA returns to its double helix form.
(b) Translation is the process wherein the codons of the mRNA are read and used to synthesize
the specific coded protein. A process of sequentially reading the codons is coordinated with the
process that makes a peptide linkage to the next amino acid in the specified sequence.

240

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

SUMMARYANDCONCEPTUALQUESTIONS
29.49 Raffinoseisnotareducingsugar.Theglycosidiclinkagescannotbehydrolyzedunderbasic
conditions.

29.51 (a)Glucocerebrosidehashydroxyl,acetal,amide,alkeneandalkylfunctionalgroups.

(b)Hydrolysisofglycosidiclinkage:

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241

Hydrolysisofamide

(c)

29.53

(a) The complementary strand of DNA is (5)GAATCGCGT(3)


(b) The complementary strand of mRNA is (5)GAAUCGCGU(3)
(c) The three anticodons are (5)UUC(3), (5)CGA(3), and (5)ACG(3). They are
complementary to the three codons of the mRNA, (5)GAA(3), (5)UCG(3), and
(5)CGU(3).
(d) (5)GAA(3) codes for Glu, glutamic acid, (5)UCG(3) codes for Ser, serine, and
(5)CGU(3) codes for Arg, arginine.

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Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

Chapter30

Inthesesolutions,thesymbols 01 e and 10 canbeusedinterchangeably,ascan 42 He and 24 .

218
4
30.1
(a) 222
86 Rn 84 Po 2 He

30.2

30.3

(b) 218
84 Po

Ephoton=9.91014J
E=60GJmol1

(a) 23290Th
(b)

218
85

208
82

30.5

Pb 6 42 He 4

Th

228
88

Ra 24 He

228
88

Ra

228
89

Ac 01 e

228
89

Ac

228
90

232
90

30.4

At 01 e

0
1

Th 01 e

(a) 137 N 136 C 10


41
(b) 20
Ca

0
1
90
39

41
19
K
Y 10
(c) 90
38 Sr
22
0
(d) 22
11 Na 12 Mg 1

(a) 32
14 Si

32
15

30.6

30.7

30.8

30.9

30.10

(b) 45
22
239
(c) 94
(d) 42
19

P+

0
1

Ti Sc +
45
21
235
92
42
20

Pu

0
1

U + 42 He

K Ca +

0
1

3.087x109KJmol1

5.145108kJmol1nucleons
(a)0.094mg
(b)36.9years
(c)81.7years
26.9days
6200years
Thesampleist=3010yearsold.
Theringdatagivetheageofthetreetobe285352years

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243

30.11 Theisolatedsampleconsistsofthefraction,20/50=0.40,oftheoriginalthreonine.Sincethe
isolatedsampleweighs60.0mg,theremusthavebeen60.0mg/0.40=150.0mgofthreonine
intheoriginalsample.

REVIEWQUESTIONS

30.13

(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
(e)
(f)

30.15

(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
(e)
(f)

54
26
27
13
32
16
96
42
98
42
18
9

Fe 42 He
2 01 n

56
28
1
0

Ni

Al He
P n
4
2

30
15

S 01 n
11 H 32
15 P

Mo 21 H
01 n 9743Tc
Mo 01 n
9943Tc

0
1

F
O
18
8

0
1

Ag
111
48 Cd

111
47
87
36
231
91
230
90
82
35
24
11

Kr

0
1
227
89
4
2
82
36
24
12

Pa

87
37

0
1

Rb

Ac 24 He

Th
He

226
88
0
1
0
1

Ra

Na
Mg
Br
Kr

30.17
4
U
231
90Th 2 He

235
92

Th
231
91 Pa

231
90

0
1

231
91

4
Pa
227
89 Ac 2 He

227
89

Ac
22790Th

0
1

4
Th
223
88 Ra 2 He

227
90
223
88

4
Ra
219
86 Rn 2 He

219
86

4
Rn
215
84 Po 2 He

215
84

4
Po
211
82 Pb 2 He

211
82

Pb
211
83 Bi

0
1

211
83

Bi
211
84 Po

0
1

211
84

4
Po
207
82 Pb 2 He

244

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

30.19

(a) Gold-198 decays to mercury-198.


198
0
198
79 Au
80 Hg 1
The atomic number increases by 1, while the mass number does not change. This is beta decay.
(b) Radon-222 decays to polonium-218.
222
4
218
86 Rn
84 Po 2 He
The atomic number decreases by 2, while the mass number decreases by 4. This is alpha decay.
(c) Cesium-137 decays to barium-137.
137
0
137
55 Cs
56 Ba 1
This is beta decay.
(d) Indium-110 decays to cadmium-110.
110
0
110
49 In
48 Cd 1
This is positron emission.

30.21

(a) Bromine-80m is a metastable state of bromine. It most likely decays by gamma emission to
form bromine-80.
80m
80
35 Br 35 Br + n
n is the number of gamma photons emitted.
(b) Californium-240 is beyondin mass and atomic numberthe band of stability. However,
its neutron to proton ratio is very low. It most likely decays by positron emission.
240
240
0
98 Cf 97 Bk + 1
236
4
Alternatively: 240
98 Cf 96 Cm + 2 He
(c) Cobalt-61 has a high neutron to proton ratio. It most likely decays by beta emission.
61
61
0
27 Co 28 Ni + 1
(d) Carbon-11 has a low neutron to proton ratio. It most likely decays by positron emission.
11
11
0
6C 5 B + 1

30.23

(a) Of the nuclei


3

H and

20

16

20

F and

13

F have high neutron to proton ratios and are likely to decay by beta emission.

(b) Of the nuclei


22

238

19

22

Na and

24

Na

Na has a low neutron to proton ratio and is likely to decay by positron emission.

Copyright2011byNelsonEducationLimited

245

30.25

For 10B,
m = 5 1.00783 + 5 1.00867 10.01294 g mol1 = 0.069510 g mol1 =
6.9510105 kg mol1
Eb = m c2
= 6.9510105 kg mol1 (2.998108 m s1)2
= 6.2481012 J mol1 = 6.248109 kJ mol1
Per nucleon,
Eb / n = 6.248109 kJ mol1 / 10 = 6.248108 kJ mol1 nucleons
For 11B,
m = 5 1.00783 + 6 1.00867 11.00931 g mol1 = 0.081805 g mol1 =
8. 1805105 kg mol1
Eb = m c2
= 8. 1805105 kg mol1 (2.998108 m s1)2
= 7.3531012 J mol1 = 7.353109 kJ mol1
Per nucleon,
Eb / n = 7.353109 kJ mol1 / 11 = 6.684108 kJ mol1 nucleons
We see that 11B is the more stable nucleusit has a higher binding energy per nucleon.

30.31

64 h corresponds to 64 h / 12.7 h = 5.04 half-lives. At this time, the mass of 64Cu is


25.0 g (1/2)5.04 = 0.760 g

30.33

131
0
(a) 131
53 I 54 Xe + 1
(b) 40.2 days corresponds to 40.2 days / 8.04 days = 5.00 half-lives. At this time, the mass of
198
Au is
2.4 g (1/2)5 = 0.075 g

30.35

13 days corresponds to 13 days / (78.25 / 24) days = 4.0 half-lives. At this time, the mass of
67
Ga is
0.015 mg (1/2)4.0 = 9.4 104 mg

30.37

218
4
(a) 222
86 Rn 84 Po + 2 He
222
(b) 20.0% of Rn remains after n half-lives.
0.200 = (1/2)n
n = ln(0.200) / ln(1/2) = 2.32
2.32 half-lives corresponds to 2.32 3.82 days = 8.87 days

30.39

0.72 of the 14C remains after n half-lives.


0.72 = (1/2)n
n = ln(0.72) / ln(1/2) = 0.47
0.47 half-lives corresponds to 0.17 5.73 103 years = 2700 years
This is the age of the bone fragment.

30.41

(a) A cobalt-60 source will drop to 1/8 of its original activity after n half-lives.
0.125 = (1/2)n
n = ln(0.125) / ln(1/2) = 3
3 half-lives corresponds to 3 27 years = 15.81 years
(b) 1 year corresponds to 1 / 5.27 = 0.190 half-lives. At this time, the fraction of 60Co
remaining is
(1/2)0.190 = 0.877

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Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

30.43

(a)
23
1
11 Na + 0 n
Na
(b)
24
11

24
12

24
11

Na
0
1

Mg +

Na-24 decay

450
400

Activity/Bq

350
300
250
200
y = 421.9e-0.046t

150
100
50
0
0

10

15

20

25

time/h

The data is clearly well fit by a simple exponential decay, 421.9 e0.046 t. The parameters of this fit
are well approximated using just the first and last data. k = 0.046 corresponds to t1/2 = ln 2 / k
= ln 2 / 0.046 h = 15 h
30.45
239
94

Pu + 2 01 n

241
94

Pu

241
95

241
94

Pu

Am +

0
1

30.47

1
U + 126 C 246
98 Cf + 4 0 n
It must be carbon-12.

30.49

(a)

238
92

(b)
(c)
(d)

30.51

10
5

30.53

6
3

114
48
6
3
40
20
63
29

1
Cd 21 H
115
48 Cd 1 H

Li 21 H
74 Be 01 n
38
Ca 21 H
19
K 42 He

65
Cu 21 H
30
Zn

B 01 n
73 Li 24 He

Li 01 n 31 H 24 He

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247

SUMMARYANDCONCEPTUALQUESTIONS
30.55

Carbon-14 levels in the atmosphere are in steady statedetermined by the flux of cosmic rays
that produce it in the upper atmosphere. Plants take up carbon-14 (via carbon dioxide) in
proportion to its concentration in the atmosphere. When they die, no more carbon-14 is absorbed.
The relative amount of carbon-14 (to carbon-12) decays exponentially with the known half-life of
carbon-14. Measuring this isotope ratio allows the age of the sample to be determinedvia the
logarithm of the isotope ratio divided by its initial value (the atmospheric level). The method, as
described here, assumes the atmospheric level has remained constant. This level is known to
have varied by up to 10% in the past. The method can be corrected for this variation, however.
Nevertheless, the method is limited to objects between 100 and 40,000 years old. There has not
been enough carbon-14 decay in objects less than 100 years old, while the level of carbon-14 is
too small to give an accurate age measurement beyond 40,000 years.

30.57

Radiation can cause transmutation of elements within cells, or can simply ionize or otherwise
disrupt cellular molecules. The resulting chemical reactions can significantly affect cellular
function and even damage DNA molecules. This can lead to cell death, if the cell is unable to
repair the damage at the rate it occurs. Thus, exposure of humans to radiation can cause radiation
sickness and even death, at sufficiently exposure levels. The killing of tissue by radiation can be
used to treat diseases such as cancer, however. By focusing radiation on a tumour, we can kill the
cancer tissue and possibly cure the patient.

30.59

The amount of 87Rb is decreased by the factor,


0.951 = (1/2)n
n = ln(0.951) / ln(1/2) = 0.072 half-lives
This corresponds to 0.072 4.8 1010 years = 3.5 109 years.

30.61 The amount of 235U decreases by the factor


0.72 / 3.0 = 0.24 = (1/2)n
n = ln(0.75) / ln(1/2) = 2.06 half-lives
This corresponds to 2.06 7.04 108 years = 1.45 109 years.
30.63

Amount of 235U = 1000 g / 235.0439 g mol1 = 4.255 mol


Amount of energy released by fission of uranium 235 = 4.255 mol 2.1 1010 kJ mol1 =
8.9 1010 kJ
To obtain the same amount of energy from coal requires
8.9 1010 kJ / 2.9 107 kJ t1 = 3100 t of coal

30.65

The time between the sample injection and the taking of the blood sample is negligible compared
to the half-life of tritium. This is a sample dilution problem. A 1.0 mL sample was injected, and
a 1.0 mL blood sample was taken. The activities measured are proportional to the sample
concentrations. The ratio of the activities equals the ratio of the blood volume to 1.0 mL. The
blood volume is just
2.0 106 Bq / 1.5 104 Bq 1.0 mL = 130 mL

30.67

We could label the methanol with the radioactive isotope, 15O, carry out the reaction, and then
sample the water and look for 15O that could only have come from methanol. The same
experiment could be carried out with labelled acetic acid to see if acid 15O ends up in the water
product.

248

Chemistry,FirstCanadianEdition

30.69

The number of atoms in 1.0 mg of 238U is


6.022 1023 mol 1.0 103 g / 238.050782 g mol1 = 2.530 1018
From N/ t kN
we get (note that 1 Bq = 1 s1)
k = ( N/ t) / N
= 12 s1 / 2.530 1018 = 4.74 1018 s1
= 4.74 1018 s1 (606024365) s y1 = 1.50 1010 y1
t1/2 = ln(2) / k = 4.6 109 y
This is close to the literature value, and consistent with the uncertainty expected with a
measurement of only 12 events.

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249

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