Haloalkanes and HaloareneshardMCQ SINGLE

Despite possessing a highly polar carbon-halogen bond (e.g., D for chloroethane), simple alkyl halidHaloalkanes and Haloarenes Chemistry Question

Question

Despite possessing a highly polar carbon-halogen bond (e.g., $\mu \approx 2.05$ D for chloroethane), simple alkyl halides are practically completely immiscible and insoluble in water. Which thermodynamic argument most accurately explains this stark observation?

Answer: B

💡 Solution & Explanation

For a solute to dissolve, it must break the intermolecular forces within both the pure solute and the pure solvent, and form new solute-solvent interactions. Water molecules are bound by a pervasive, highly energetic network of hydrogen bonds. Alkyl halides cannot form hydrogen bonds with water. The weak dipole-dipole or dipole-induced dipole attractions formed between water and the alkyl halide release very little energy—far too little to compensate for the massive enthalpy required to break the water-water hydrogen bonds. Thus, dissolution is thermodynamically unfavorable.

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