Alcohols have higher boiling points than do ethers and alkanes of similar molar masses.
<h3>What is meant by Boiling Point ?</h3>
The temperature at which the vapor pressure of a liquid equals the pressure surrounding the liquid is called the boiling point of the substance.
Approximately boiling point of Ethanol: 78.4°C, ether: 34.6°C, ethanes: 68°C
The reason for the difference is that it takes more energy to separate alcohol molecules then it does to separate alkane molecules and ether molecules.
The OH group in alcohol allows molecules to engage in hydrogen bonding.
Therefore Boiling point are in the order ;
Alcohol > alkane > ethers
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I got on here because I don't understand the question but I did my best to answer because I noticed you asked 3 days ago. IF I'm right the answer is D. My diagram shows
A at -50 °C
B at 0 °C
C at 50 °C
D at 100 °C (gas to liquid or liquid to gas)
And E at 150 °C
So I hope I'm right because I'm answering the same question.
The atmosphere contains the air we breathe
Answer:C
Explanation: The mass is still the same even though they took it apart.