This is my response, hopefully it answers your question.
1) Why do alkane and alcohols have different boiling points for the same numbers of carbons.
Alkanes have a different boiling points compared to alcohols due to the alkanes not being associated with Hydrogen bonding. Poor leading sentence. Start with what determines MP/BP. The alkanes are made up of singular covalent bonds which don’t have hydrogen bonds, which results in a low boiling pointwhy? whereas alcohols have a hydroxide ion which forms into a hydroxyl group leading to a higher electronegativity between oxygen and hydrogen compared to carbon and hydrogen.a hydroxyl group does not "lead" to the a "higher" electronegativity (which is also incorrect - greater difference in electronegativity*)
Carbon and hydrogen have very similar electro negativities resulting in them being nonpolar. This will result in the hydroxide ion bonding with other hydrogen’s leading to stronger forces to break those bonds, which results in different boiling points between alkanes and alcohols. Overall this was confusing. Are you saying the hydroxyl group detaches to form a hydroxide ion which then reacts with hydrogen? To form what - H2O? Also, BP/MP does not relate to the energy required to break covalent bonds but rather intermolecular bonds
Another factor sounds like the same thing to me is that alkanes do not have a polar group, which means that the alkane’s only intermolecular force is dispersion forces, where as alcohol groups have a hydroxide group which means that the forces are hydrogen bonding.
Since Alkanes don’t have hydrogen bonding, and only dispersion forces, there isn’t as much energy required to break those bonds, compared to alcohols as alcohols have hydrogen bonding, which is stronger than dispersion forces in the specification of breaking those bonds. The amount of electrons within the alkane compound determines how much energy is required to break these bonds.careful here. other factors are involved in the strength of dispersion forces including shape of molecule. Also I believe its incorrect to refer to them as bonds This is also another reason as to the differences in the boiling point between alkanes and alcohol.unecessary repetition
Josh Kerr