'Iron' is correctly related to the state 'Solid'; in the same classification by states of matter, 'Mercury' should be related to which state?
Correct Answer: Liquid
Introduction / Context:This analogy classifies substances by their common state under standard conditions. Iron is ordinarily a solid, so we must select the normal state of mercury at room temperature and pressure.
Given Data / Assumptions:
- Iron at room temperature is a solid metal.
- Mercury is a metallic element with unusual state behavior.
- We assume standard laboratory conditions (around 25°C, 1 atm).
Concept / Approach:Maintain identical relation: substance → typical physical state at room temperature. The choice should reflect common scientific knowledge rather than extreme conditions.
Step-by-Step Solution:1) Confirm first mapping: Iron → Solid (true at room temperature).2) Identify mercury's typical state at room temperature.3) Mercury is the only common metal that is liquid at room temperature.4) Therefore, Mercury → Liquid.
Verification / Alternative check:Reference property tables list mercury's melting point around -38.83°C, well below room temperature, confirming its liquid state in ordinary conditions.
Why Other Options Are Wrong:
- Solid: Not true at room temperature for mercury.
- Gas/Vapour: Mercury vaporizes at much higher temperatures; not its standard state.
- None of these: Incorrect because 'Liquid' is correct.
Common Pitfalls:Assuming all metals are solid at room temperature. Mercury is an important exception.
Final Answer:Liquid