Answer:
100.8 °C
Explanation:
The Clausius-clapeyron equation is:
-Δ
Where 'ΔHvap' is the enthalpy of vaporization; 'R' is the molar gas constant (8.314 j/mol); 'T1' is the temperature at the pressure 'P1' and 'T2' is the temperature at the pressure 'P2'
Isolating for T2 gives:

(sorry for 'deltaHvap' I can not input symbols into equations)
thus T2=100.8 °C
PH scale is used to determine how acidic or basic a solution is.
we have been given the hydrogen ion concentration. Using this we can calculate pH,
pH = - log[H⁺]
pH = - log (1 x 10⁻¹ M)
pH = 1
using pH can calculate pOH
pH + pOH = 14
pOH = 14 - 1
pOH = 13
using pOH we can calculate the hydroxide ion concentration
pOH = - log [OH⁻]
[OH⁻] = antilog(-pOH)
[OH⁻] = 10⁻¹³ M
hydroxide ion concentration is 10⁻¹³ M
The molarity of H2SO4 is the number of moles in 1 L of solution.
The molarity is 2.0 mol/L
This means that there should be 2 moles in a 1 L solution to make up this molarity.
In this case we need to make up a 5 L solutions with that molarity. Then the amount of moles required are - 2 mol/L x 5 L = 10 mol
CaO
Calcium reacts with oxygen to form calcium oxide. The chemical equation for this reaction is Ca + O2 → CaO.