chuinhen Posted October 23, 2006 Posted October 23, 2006 when going down Group 14 ( carbon to lead ) the boiling point of chlorides of group 14 increase down the group However the boiling point of the CCl4 has a extremely high boiling point relatively !!!!! Why is it so ???
5614 Posted October 23, 2006 Posted October 23, 2006 As far as I understand CCl4 has a high boiling point (relative to that of PbCl4) because the +4 oxidation state of the carbon is very stable. Whereas for lead it is not. As you go down Group 4 (towards lead) the +4 oxidation state becomes less stable and so for example; PbCl4 easily decomposes into PbCl2 + Cl2.
insane_alien Posted October 23, 2006 Posted October 23, 2006 no, 5614. thats stability of the molecules. melting points are dependant on intermolecular bonds and lattice structure. i don't know for sure why its higher but it is not extremely high relatively. it is inline with the trends shown by tetrachlorides of elements below it. i would suggest it is to do with the more similar electronegativity with carbon that is causing it somehow.
woelen Posted October 24, 2006 Posted October 24, 2006 Insane_alien is right. Stability of molecules does not tell anything about melting point and boiling point. I'm not sure, however, why CCl4 would have an abnormally high boiling point. With compounds like NH3, H2O, HF the explanation is formation of H-bridges, but chlorine does not do something like that. CCl4 also is completely symmetric and apolar, so polarity also is not the reason for a higher than expected boiling point.
chuinhen Posted October 25, 2006 Author Posted October 25, 2006 huh ??? Does anyone has a clearer clarification
chuinhen Posted October 30, 2006 Author Posted October 30, 2006 Is it due to the arrangement or the lattice structure of CCL4 ??????? but it is a simple molecule if im not mistaken
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