MCQMediumJEE 2023Ligands & Coordination Number

JEE Chemistry 2023 Question with Solution

Match List I with List II.

Table image showing List I and List II items for a matching question in coordination compounds with four entries each.Small overlay handle icon from the editor interface, not part of the chemistry question content.
  • A

    (A) - IV, (B) - II, (C) - I, (D) - III

  • B

    (A) - II, (B) - III, (C) - I, (D) - IV

  • C

    (A) - III, (B) - I, (C) - II, (D) - IV

  • D

    (A) - II, (B) - IV, (C) - I, (D) - III

Answer

Correct answer:C

Step-by-step solution

Standard Method

Given: A match-the-following question on double salts and coordination compounds.

Find: The correct matching option.

Double salts dissociate completely into their constituent ions in water, whereas coordination compounds do not dissociate fully because they form coordination complexes.

From the solution analysis:

  • (A) FeSO44 · (NH44)22SO44 · 66H22O is Mohr's salt, a double salt.
  • (B) CuSO44 · 44NH33 · H22O is a coordination compound.
  • (C) K22SO44 · Al22(SO44)33 · 2424H22O is potash alum, a double salt.
  • (D) Fe(CN)22 · 44KCN is a coordination compound.

Thus the correct identification corresponds to the matching given in option C.

Therefore, the correct option is C.

Classification Logic

Given: Examples of salts and complexes are to be matched.

Find: Which option correctly classifies them.

The key idea is:

Double salts dissociate completely in water, while coordination compounds retain complex ions.\text{Double salts dissociate completely in water, while coordination compounds retain complex ions.}

Using this:

  1. Mohr's salt = (A)double salt
  2. CuSO44 · 44NH33 · H22O = (B)coordination compound
  3. Potash alum = (C)double salt
  4. Fe(CN)22 · 44KCN = (D)coordination compound

So the arrangement matches the one listed under option C.

Therefore, the correct option is C.

Common mistakes

  • Treating every hydrated salt as a double salt is incorrect because the presence of water of crystallization alone does not decide the classification. Instead, check whether the compound dissociates completely into simple ions in water.

  • Assuming ammonia-containing compounds are always double salts is wrong. Ligands like NH33 often indicate coordination behavior, so identify whether a coordination sphere is formed.

  • Confusing double salts with coordination compounds leads to wrong matching. A double salt loses its separate identity in solution, while a coordination compound retains complex ions in solution.

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