I can exclude water because it forms an azeotrope and i know its not one. Other than that I am not sure
You may not exclude water for that reason, because your definition doesn't make sense.
An azeotrope is a constant boiling mixture of 2 (example ethanol and water) or more (example ethanol-water-benzene) substances. So saying water forms an azeotrope makes as much sense as.
That's not a typo by me, I deliberately left the conclusion off to make a point.
OK, you've been on this board for a while, and surely you've been told to read the
Forum Rules{click}, we want to see your attempt.
Sometimes, like this time, we still have to explain what we mean by that. You've given a list of substances and their boiling points, and you have some temperature readings. If you can exclude some, then you should do so, before you ask your question, if you don't, then you obviously haven't tried to solve the problem at all.
Which of your possible substances has a boiling point that doesn't appear in your experimental results? You can strik that one off your list. This is how you start to solve this problem.