Thanks Ramboacid
Interesting. It seems to me that as temperature is essentially just a molecular speedometer, that ΔHvap is perhaps the truer reflection of the energy required to overcome the intermolecular forces and it does relate energy to amount ie kJ to mol. Therefore this suggests the forces of attraction between ethanol molecules are stronger (despite less H-bonding) possibly due to greater total temporary dipole forces. We could then say that because ΔSvap ethanol is higher, that more disorder has to be created as part of spontaneous ethanol boiling, compared to water boiling, which makes sense from the H-bonded structure of water … a lot of order exists in water vapour relative to the liquid, or vice versa. So finally this suggests that boiling point is simply the measure of enthalpy required per mole per unit of disorder created in vapourisation … if you can visualise this??!
OR, alternatively, that temperature is the better indicator of energy needed to overcome intermolecular forces, as it is a measure of molecular (kinetic) energy, and that at the boiling point, all IMF’s in the liquid state have been broken. What then has to happen is vapourisation, a second process, requiring a huge increase in entropy, and a greater increase for ethanol than water considering their different structures.
In the former scenario, temperature is the consequence of the necessary ΔH and ΔS, in the latter, ΔH is the consequence of the necessary boiling point and ΔS – which one do you prefer … if either?!