Change set

Pick exam & year, then Go.

Question map
Not attempted Correct Incorrect ★ Bookmarked
Loading…
Q10 (CDS-II/2008) Science & Technology › Basic Science (Physics, Chemistry, Biology) › Basic chemical principles Answer Verified

For which one of the following is the density maximum ?

Result
Your answer: —  Â·  Correct: A
Explanation

Density is defined as mass per unit volume. Comparing the given substances at standard conditions (approximately 20-25°C), Chloroform (CHCl3) has the highest density at approximately 1.48-1.49 g/cm⊃3 [t3][t9]. In contrast, pure water has a maximum density of approximately 1.00 g/cm⊃3 at 4°C [c1][t4]. Benzene (C6H6) is less dense than water, with a density of about 0.87 g/cm⊃3 [t4][t9]. Ice, the solid form of water, is even less dense than liquid water (approximately 0.917 g/cm⊃3), which is why it floats [c2][c3]. Chloroform's high density is primarily due to the presence of three heavy chlorine atoms (atomic weight ~35.5 each) attached to a single carbon atom, significantly increasing its molecular weight (119.37 g/mol) relative to its molecular volume [t3][t9]. Therefore, among the options provided, Chloroform is the densest substance.

Sources

  1. [1] https://pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/compound/Chloroform
  2. [2] Science ,Class VIII . NCERT(Revised ed 2025) > Chapter 9: The Amazing World of Solutes, Solvents, and Solutions > Conversion factor for density > p. 141
  3. [3] FUNDAMENTALS OF PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY, Geography Class XI (NCERT 2025 ed.) > Chapter 12: Water (Oceans) > SALINITY OF OCEAN WATERS > p. 104
  4. [4] Science , class X (NCERT 2025 ed.) > Chapter 9: Light – Reflection and Refraction > 9.3.2 The Refractive Index > p. 149
How others answered
Each bar shows the % of students who chose that option. Green bar = correct answer, blue outline = your choice.
Community Performance
Out of everyone who attempted this question.
37%
got it right
✓ Thank you! We'll review this.

SIMILAR QUESTIONS

5 Cross-Linked PYQs

UPSC repeats concepts across years. Login to see how this question connects to 5 others.

Login with Google