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Tamil Nadu Board of Secondary EducationHSC Science Class 11

NH3 has an exceptionally high melting point and boiling point as compared to those of the hydrides of the remaining element of group 15 - Explain. - Chemistry

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Question

NH3 has an exceptionally high melting point and boiling point as compared to those of the hydrides of the remaining element of group 15 - Explain.

Answer in Brief

Solution

  1. NH3 has an exceptionally high melting point and boiling point due to hydrogen bonding between NH3 molecules.
  2. Each molecule can form a maximum of 4 hydrogen bonds but on average 1 hydrogen bond per molecule as there is only one lone pair on NH3 available for hydrogen bonding.
  3. Hydrogen bonding is a strong intermolecular attraction as H on NH3 acts as a proton due to partial positive on it the whole N has the partial negative charge. Thus when the very polarized H comes close to an N atom in another NH3 molecule, a very strong hydrogen bond is formed.
  4. Due to many strong intermolecular interactions compared to weaker permanent dipole-dipole interactions between other XH3 molecules in group 15, a large amount of energy is required to overcome the forces, giving it the highest boiling point and highest melting point.
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Hydrides
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Chapter 4: Hydrogen - Evaluation [Page 123]

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Samacheer Kalvi Chemistry - Volume 1 and 2 [English] Class 11 TN Board
Chapter 4 Hydrogen
Evaluation | Q II. 19. | Page 123
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