| List I | List II | ||
| A | 3 Translational degrees of freedom | I | Monoatomic gases |
| B | 3 Translational, 2 rotational degrees of freedoms | II | Polyatomic gases |
| C | 3 Translational, 2 rotational and 1 vibrational degrees of freedom | III | Rigid diatomic gases |
| D | 3 Translational, 3 rotational and more than one vibrational degrees of freedom | IV | Nonrigid diatomic gases |
Monoatomic gases only have translational degrees of freedom. Diatomic molecules can have translational, rotational, and (if nonrigid) vibrational degrees of freedom. Polyatomic molecules generally have all three types
| Type of Gas | No. of Degrees of Freedom |
|---|---|
| 1. Monoatomic | 3 (Translational) |
| 2. Diatomic + rigid | 3 (Translational) + 2 (Rotational) = 5 |
| 3. Diatomic + non-rigid | 3 (Translational) + 2 (Rotational) + 1 (Vibrational) |
| 4. Polyatomic | 3 (Translational) + 2 (Rotational) + more than 1 (Vibrational) |
A substance 'X' (1.5 g) dissolved in 150 g of a solvent 'Y' (molar mass = 300 g mol$^{-1}$) led to an elevation of the boiling point by 0.5 K. The relative lowering in the vapour pressure of the solvent 'Y' is $____________ \(\times 10^{-2}\). (nearest integer)
[Given : $K_{b}$ of the solvent = 5.0 K kg mol$^{-1}$]
Assume the solution to be dilute and no association or dissociation of X takes place in solution.