Question
Chemistry Question on Hydrogen Bonding
The boiling point of para nitrophenol is greater than ortho nitrophenol, because:
there is intermolecular hydrogen bonding in para nitrophenol and intramolecular hydrogen bonding in ortho nitrophenol
there is intramolecular hydrogen bonding in para nitrophenol and intermolecular hydrogen bonding in ortho nitrophenol
both have the same kind of hydrogen bonding
para nitrophenol is polar, while ortho nitrophenol is non-polar
there is intermolecular hydrogen bonding in para nitrophenol and intramolecular hydrogen bonding in ortho nitrophenol
Solution
Phenols containing group like NO2 in the ortho position to the −OH group can form intramolecular hydrogen bonds (e. g., o-nitrophenol) which is responsible for their lower boiling points and less solubility in water than the corresponding meta or para isomer. Due to possibility of intramolecular H-bonding (also known as chelation) in the ortho isomer, intermolecular H-bonding is not possible and hence, the ortho isomer can neither associate nor can form H-bonding with H2O with the result it has a low boiling point and less solubility in H2O than the meta and para isomers which can associate (union of 2 or more molecules of the same species) as well as can form H-bonding with H2O .