The secondary valency and the number of hydrogen bonded water molecule(s) in CuSO?·5H?O respectively, are:

Option 1 - <p>6 and 4<br>&lt;!-- [if !supportLineBreakNewLine]--&gt;<br>&lt;!--[endif]--&gt;</p>
Option 2 - <p>4 and 1<br>&lt;!-- [if !supportLineBreakNewLine]--&gt;<br>&lt;!--[endif]--&gt;</p>
Option 3 - <p>5 and 1<br>&lt;!-- [if !supportLineBreakNewLine]--&gt;<br>&lt;!--[endif]--&gt;</p>
Option 4 - <p>6 and 5</p>
5 Views|Posted 5 months ago
Asked by Shiksha User
1 Answer
R
5 months ago
Correct Option - 4
Detailed Solution:

CuSO? 5H? O is blue vitriol which is represented as [Cu (H? O)? ]. H? O.SO? Here, secondary valencies are 4 H? O and 1H? O molecule outside coordination sphere is involved in hydrogen bonding.

Thumbs Up IconUpvote Thumbs Down Icon

Similar Questions for you

ΔG° = –RT * 2.303 log K

–nFE° = +RT * 2.303 log K

2 * 96500 * 0.295 = 8.314 * 298 * 2.303 log10 K

10 = log10 K = 1010

It has chiral centre and differently di substituted double bonded carbon atoms.

Taking an Exam? Selecting a College?

Get authentic answers from experts, students and alumni that you won't find anywhere else.

On Shiksha, get access to

66K
Colleges
|
1.2K
Exams
|
6.9L
Reviews
|
1.8M
Answers

Learn more about...

Chemistry Coordination Compounds 2025

Chemistry Coordination Compounds 2025

View Exam Details

Most viewed information

Summary

Share Your College Life Experience

Didn't find the answer you were looking for?

Search from Shiksha's 1 lakh+ Topics

or

Ask Current Students, Alumni & our Experts

Have a question related to your career & education?

or

See what others like you are asking & answering