The correct increasing order of boiling point of aqueous solutions

Q. Consider the following aqueous solutions.

I. 2.2 g Glucose in 125 mL of solution.
II. 1.9 g Calcium chloride in 250 mL of solution.
III. 9.0 g Urea in 500 mL of solution.
IV. 20.5 g Aluminium sulphate in 750 mL of solution.

The correct increasing order of boiling point of these solutions will be :

[Given : Molar mass in g mol−1 : H = 1, C = 12, N = 14, O = 16, Cl = 35.5, Ca = 40, Al = 27 and S = 32]

A. III < I < II < IV
B. II < III < IV < I
C. II < III < I < IV
D. I < II < III < IV

Correct Answer: I < II < III < IV

Explanation

Elevation in boiling point depends on the quantity i × m, where i = van’t Hoff factor and m = molality.


Step 1: Calculate molarity (approx. molality)

Solution Moles Volume (L) Molarity (M)
I (Glucose) 2.2 / 180 = 0.0122 0.125 0.0976
II (CaCl2) 1.9 / 111 = 0.0171 0.25 0.0684
III (Urea) 9 / 60 = 0.15 0.5 0.30
IV (Al2(SO4)3) 20.5 / 342 = 0.06 0.75 0.08

Step 2: Apply van’t Hoff factor

Glucose → non-electrolyte → i = 1

Urea → non-electrolyte → i = 1

CaCl2 → Ca2+ + 2Cl → i = 3

Al2(SO4)3 → 2Al3+ + 3SO42− → i = 5


Step 3: Compare i × M

Solution i × M
I 1 × 0.0976 = 0.0976
II 3 × 0.0684 = 0.205
III 1 × 0.30 = 0.30
IV 5 × 0.08 = 0.40

Higher the value of i × M, higher will be the boiling point.

Therefore, increasing order of boiling point:

I < II < III < IV

Updated for JEE Main 2026: This PYQ is important for JEE Mains, JEE Advanced and other competitive exams. Practice more questions from this chapter.

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