Determine the specific heat of a metal.
a) A 1.500g of metal was heated to 90.00°C and transferred to a Calorimeter (qcal = 20.5 J) containing 40.00mL of water at 25.00°C, it registered an equilibrium temperature of 32.50°C.

Determine the specific heat of a metal. a) A 1.500g of metal was heated to 90.00°C...
2. (15 pts) A 83.5 g sample of a metal alloy is heated to 88.1°C and it is then placed in a coffee-cup calorimeter containing 30.0 g water at 15.0°C. The final temperature of the metal + water is 25.3 °C. Calculate the specific heat of metal alloy, in J/(g°C), assuming no heat escapes to the surroundings or is transferred to the calorimeter. The specific heat of water is 4.184 J/(g°C).
A 16.260g piece of metal was heated in a hot water bath at . The hot metal was then transferred to a calorimeter containing 50.00 mL of water (d of H2O= 1.00 g/mL). From the time-temperature plot, the initial and final temperature for the water were determined to be and , respectively. A) calculate heat (q) gained by the calorimeter and water assuming Ccal= , qH2O= (4.184 J/gC)(mwater)() and qcal=Ccal. 95.5°C 23.76°C 26.18°C 21.0J/ C T We were unable to...
1. Prepare for It! Prelab Question A A 235.0 g sample of metal is heated to 100.0°C and poured into a calorimeter containing 50.0 g of water at 20.5°C. The equilibrium temperature of the water and metal is 30.5°C. Using the specific heat of water, 4.18 J/g C, determine the specific heat of the metal from equation 3. Use equation 5 to find the approximate molar mass of the metal. Show your work! Use back if needed. 2. Prepare for...
A 61.93 gram sample of iron (with a specific heat of 0.450 J/g °C) is heated to 100.0 °C. It is then transferred to a coffee cup calorimeter containing 40.6 g of water (specific heat of 4.184 J/ g °C) initally at 20.63 °C. If the final temperature of the system is 23.59, what was the heat absorbed (q) of the calorimeter? (total heat absorbed by the water and calorimeter = heat released by the iron)
A 83.5 g sample of a metal alloy is heated to 88.1oC and it is then placed in a coffee-cup calorimeter containing 30.0 g water at 15.0oC. The final temperature of the metal + water is 25.3 oC. Calculate the specific heat of metal alloy, in J/(g oC), assuming no heat escapes to the surroundings or is transferred to the calorimeter. The specific heat of water is 4.184 J/(g oC).
A 21.3 g sample of a metal was heated to 61.67°C. When the metal was placed into 17.8 g of water in a calorimeter, the temperature of the water increased from 25.00°C to 30.00°C. What is the specific heat of th metal? The specific heat of water is 4.18 J/g. °C). Specific heat- J/g °C) Submit Answer Try Another Version 10 item attempts remaining
A metal object with mass of 24.0 g is heated to 97.0 °C and then transferred to an insulated container containing 88.5 g of water at 20.5 °C. The water temperature rises and the temperature of the metal object falls until they both reach the same final temperature of 23.2 °C. What is the specific heat of this metal object? Assume that all the heat lost by the metal object is absorbed by the water. specific heat:
A 45.90 g sample of pure copper is heated in a test tube to 99.40°C. The copper sample is then transferred to a calorimeter containing 61.04 g of deionized water. The water temperature in the calorimeter rises from 24.39°C to 29.10°C. The specific heat capacity of copper metal and water are J J 0.387 and 4.184 respectively. - 9 Assuming that heat was transferred from the copper to the water and the calorimeter, determine the heat capacity of the calorimeter....
A 45.90 g sample of pure copper is heated in a test tube to 99.40°C. The copper sample is then transferred to a calorimeter containing 61.04 g of deionized water. The water temperature in the calorimeter rises from 24.47°C to 29.10°C. The specific heat capacity of copper metal and water are J J 0.387 and 4.184 respectively. gr°C g. °C Assuming that heat was transferred from the copper to the water and the calorimeter, determine the heat capacity of the...
Specific Heat Capacity A 21.5-g sample of an unknown metal is heated to 94.0°C and is placed in a insulated container containing 128 g of water at a temperature of 21.4°C. After the metal cools, the final temperature of the metal and water is 25.0°C. Calculate the specific heat capacity of the metal, assuming that no heat escapes to the surroundings. Heat loss=Heat gained. Specific Heat Capacity of water is 4.18 J/g/K in this temperature range. Submit Answer Incompatible units....