358 ❯ STEP 5. Build Your Test-Taking Confidence- B—In general, gases have much higher entropy
 than either liquids or solids. For this reason, the
 predictions depend primarily upon which reac-
 tion results in the greatest decrease in the number
 of moles of gas. A and D both result in an
 increase in the number of moles of gas, so there
 is an increase in entropy. C shows no change in
 the number of moles of gas; therefore, the change
 in entropy will be small.
- D— The relationship, given on the equations page
 of the exam is ΔG = ΔH - TΔS. Nonspontaneous
 under standard conditions means: ΔG > 0. To
 become spontaneous, ΔG must be less than zero.
 Increasing the temperature will change the TΔS
 term (entropy). If ΔH is greater than zero and ΔS
 is also greater than zero, the combination will be
 positive as long as the ΔH is greater than TΔS.
 As the temperature increases, TΔS will eventu-
 ally become larger than ΔH, making the process
 spontaneous.
- C—In general, the more oxygen atoms present
 not attached to hydrogen atoms, the stronger the
 oxyacid. If two oxyacids have the same number
 of oxygen atoms not attached to hydrogen atoms,
 the acid with the more electronegative central
 atom is the stronger acid. The number of oxygen
 atoms without hydrogen atoms attached are
 HClO = 0, HBrO = 0, H 2 SeO 3 = 1, and H 2 SO 3
 = 1. The electronegativities increase in the order
 Se < S and Br < Cl.
- D—The melting points of ionic compounds
 increase with increasing lattice energy. Lattice
 energy increases with increasing ionic charge and
 with decreasing sum of ionic radii. It is apparent
 from comparing NaF to CaO that charge is more
 important than small changes in radii. The charges
 are Na+, Ca^2 +, Sr^2 +, Ba^2 +, F-, Cl-, and O^2 -.
- C—The melting points of ionic compounds
 increase with increasing lattice energy. Lattice
 energy increases with increasing ionic charge and
 with decreasing sum of ionic radii. The oxide ion
 radius is a constant, while the metal radii decrease
 in the order Ba^2 + > Sr^2 + > Ca^2 +. The decrease in
 metal radii is due to the smaller ions having fewer
 electron shells.
 45. B—The balanced chemical equation is:
 2 HgO(s) → 2 Hg(l) + O 2 (g)
 The calculation is:
 
 
(4.32gHgO) =1mol HgO
216 gHgO1moleO
2moleHgO2
=
(4.32) 
1
216
1 mole O
2(2.16)
1
216
(^2) ×
1 mole O
1(^2) = 0.0100 mole O 2
- A—The substance with the highest melting
 point has the strongest intermolecular forces. All
 four molecules are nonpolar; therefore, the inter-
 molecular forces are London dispersion forces. In
 general, London dispersion forces, for molecules
 with similar structures, London dispersion forces
 increase with increasing molar mass.
- D—Since phenol has a Ka values given, it is a
 weak acid; as such, the equilibrium expression is:
 C 6 H 5 OH(aq) ^ H+(aq) + C 6 H 5 O-(aq)
 Use the Ka expression:
Ka =[H+][CB]
[CV]
= 1 × 10 -^10 =
[][]
[1.0]
xxThis leads to:
[H+] = (1.0 × 1 × 10 -^10 )1/2 = (1 × 10 -^10 )1/2 =
1 × 10 -^5 M- C—The higher the average number of bonds
 between the nitrogen atoms, the shorter the
 bond is. For diazene there are two bonds, for
 triazene the average is 1.5 bonds, and for tetra-
 zene the average is 1.33 bonds. The length of
 the average bond length increases in the order
 2 < 1.5 < 1.33.
- D—The carbon is a solid and the water is a
 liquid; therefore, neither of these will be in the
 calculation. Since the volume of the container is
 1.00 L, the molarities of the other two substances
 are 4.00 M NH 3 and 2.00 M CO 2.
 Kc = [NH 3 ]^2 [CO 2 ] = (4.00)^2 (2.00) = 32.0
21-Moore_PE02_p341-370.indd 358 31/05/18 1:54 pm
