
The maximum temperature at which you can drink a hot beverage without burning your tongue is...
Discussion Question: Why can you drink a cup of boiling-hot tea atop a high mountain without any danger of burning your lips? What if you did this in a mine shaft below sea level?
Brewed coffee is often too hot to drink right away. You can cool it with an ice cube, but this dilutes it. Or you can buy a device that will cool your coffee without dilution - a 220 g aluminum cylinder that you take from your freezer and place in a mug of hot coffee. If the cylinder is cooled to -20∘C, a typical freezer temperature, and then dropped into a large cup of coffee (essentially water, with a mass...
Brewed coffee is often too hot to drink right away. You can cool it with an ice cube, but this dilutes it. Or you can buy a device that will cool your coffee without dilution - a 250 g aluminum cylinder that you take from your freezer and place in a mug of hot coffee. If the cylinder is cooled to -20∘C , a typical freezer temperature, and then dropped into a large cup of coffee (essentially water, with a...
You just made a cup (0.3 liters) of coffee, but it is too hot to drink. You wish to decrease the temperature of the tea from 72°C down to 64"C by submerging a numoer or aluminusp hcffefthe snd owever, instead o temperature (25°C), then how many spoons will be required to decrease the coffee to the optimum temperature? 5 spoons Assume: Cp for coffee 4184 Cp for aluminum 921 density of coffee= 1000 kg/m no heat loss from the cup...
Enter your answer in the provided box. At a local convenience store, you purchase a cup of coffee, but, at 98.4°C, it is too hot to drink. You add 41.7 g of ice that is −2.2°C to the 248 mL of coffee. What is the final temperature of the coffee? (Assume the heat capacity and density of the coffee are the same as water and the coffee cup is well insulated.)
Enter your answer in the provided box. At a local convenience store, you purchase a cup of coffee, but, at 98.4°C, it is too hot to drink. You add 20.2 g of ice that is −2.2°C to the 248 mL of coffee. What is the final temperature of the coffee? (Assume the heat capacity and density of the coffee are the same as water and the coffee cup is well insulated.)
Question 4 The aluminum cup inside your calorimeter weighs 41.55 g. You add 59.21 g of 1.0 M acetic acid solution and 50.03 g of 1.0 M sodium hydroxide solution to the calorimeter. Both solutions have an initial temperature of 19.9 oC, and the final temperature after addition is 26.8 oC. What is the molar enthalpy of neutralization, in units of kJ/mol? Assume that: the calorimeter is completely insulated the heat capacity of the empty calorimeter is the heat capacity...
Consider the information provided in the Hot Coffee Lawsuit. What might be the possible implications for the Restaurant Industry? What might be a long term impact? In 1992, Stella Liebeck spilled scalding McDonald's coffee in her lap and later sued the company, attracting a flood of negative attention. It turns out there was more to the story. The case is now famous but when Stella Liebeck burnt McDonald's coffee she would never know that it would still be talked about...
can you check 36 to 41
ID: A 36. A patient who recently underwent surgery has a large incision encouraged to eat that will provide vitamin C for wound healing a Whole grains b. Citrus fruits c. Eggs d. Com ton. Which foods should the patient be nitoring. When weighing the patient, the -pounds from the previous w ht The best way for the nurse An obese patient is seen as an outpatient for weight monitoring nurse notices an increase...
please help with how the flow chart will look like? thank
you!
Synthesis of n-Butyl Bromide Purpose of the Experiment: In this week's experiment you will be synthesizing n-butylbromide (IUPAC 1-bromobutane from 1-butanol and a concentrated acid via a nucleophilie substitution reaction. It is important to know that alcohols dehydrate to form alkenes in the presence of strong inorganic acids, so care must be taken in this experiment not to heat the reaction too vigorously else an elimination reaction may...