An aluminum calorimeter of mass 100g contains 250g of water at a temperature of 10C. A 50g block of an unknown material at a temperature of 100C is placed in the water. After some time the temperature of the three materials reaches equilibrium. If the block has a specific heat of 1823 J kg-1 o K-1 , what is the final temperature in C?
An aluminum calorimeter of mass 100g contains 250g of water at a temperature of 10C. A...
An aluminum calorimeter with a mass of 100 g contains 250 g of water. The calorimeter and water are in thermal equilibrium at 10°C. Two metallic blocks are placed into the water. One is a 51.0-g piece of copper at 80°C. The other has a mass of 544 g and is originally at a temperature of 100°C. The entire system stabilizes at a final temperature of 20°C. (a) Determine the specific heat of the unknown sample. (J/Kg*C) (b) Using the...
Problem 5: A 95-g aluminum calorimeter contains 241 g of water. The aluminum and water are initially in thermal equilibrium at a temperature of 9.3°C. Two solid objects are then placed in the water. One is a 50.3-g piece of copper with a specific heat of 390 J/(kg:°C) and an initial temperature of 81.2°C. The other is of unknown material with a mass of 69 g and an initial temperature of 100°C. The entire system reaches thermal equilibrium at a...
An aluminum calorimeter with a mass of 425.00 g contains 1062.50 g of water. The calorimeter and water are in thermal equilibrium at 12.50 ° C. Two metal blocks are placed in the water. One is a piece of copper from 212.50 g to 85.00 ° C. The other has a mass of 202.50 g and is originally at a temperature of 105.00 ° C. The entire system is stabilized at a final temperature of 22.50 ° C. (a) Determine...
A 100 g aluminum calorimeter contains 250 g of water. The two substances are in thermal equilibrium at 10°C. Two metallic blocks are placed in the water. One is a 50 g piece of copper at 76°C. The other sample has a mass of 73 g and is originally at a temperature of 100°C. The entire system stabilizes at a final temperature of 20°C. Determine the specific heat of the unknown second sample. J/kg·°C
2. Steam at a temperature of 110 C is added to an aluminum calorimeter containing 250g of water at 30°C. The mass of the calorimeter is 140g and of specific heat 0.22 calg.Co. Find the mass of steam specitic hea needed that will produce a mixture of temperature 50°C. (Assume no heat is lost or gained from the surrounding.)
A 200 g aluminum calorimeter can contain 500 g of water at 20 C. A 100 g piece of ice cooled to -20 C is placed in the calorimeter. Find the final temperature of the system, assuming no heat losses. (Assume that the specific heat of ice is 2.0 kJ/kg K) A second 200 g piece of ice at -20 C is added. How much ice remains in the system after it reaches equilibrium? Would your answer to part b...
A
100 g aluminum calorimeter contains 250 g of water. The two
substances are in thermal equilibrium at 10°C. Two metallic blacks
are placed in water. One is a 50 gram piece of copper at 82°C. The
other sample has a mass of 57 g and is originally at a temperature
of 100°C. The entire system stabilizes at a final temperature of
20°C. Determine the specific heat of the unknown second sample.
A 100 g aluminum calorimeter contains 250 g...
1) An aluminum calorimeter of
mass 58 g, has 155 g water, both at a temperature of 21°C. A 108-g
piece of metal originally kept in boiling water (T = 100°C) is
transferred to the calorimeter. The final equilibrium temperature
of the mixture is 26.6°C. Calculate the specific heat of the metal
(in J/kg). Specific Heats: Al = 900 J/kg, water =4186 J/g
2) How much heat, in kilo-joules, is required to convert 19 g of
ice at -13°C into...
9. 100-g aluminum calorimeter contains 250-g of water. The two substances are in thermal equilibrium at 10° C. Two metallic blocks are placed in the water. One is a 50- piece of copper at 80° C. The other sample has a mass of 70-g and is originally at temperature of 100° C. The entire system stabilizes at a final temperature of 200 C. Determine the specific heat of the unknown second sample. (Assume the specific heat of aluminum, and copper...
A well-insulated aluminum calorimeter cup with mass of 205 g contains 255 g of liquid water at 21.7 °C. A 287-g silver figure of polar bear, with initial temperature of 96.5 °C, is dropped into the water. What is the final temperature of the water, cup, and bear when they reach thermal equilibrium? The specific heats of silver, aluminum, and liquid water are, respectively, 234 J/(kg.K), 910 J/(kg:K), and 4190 J/(kg.K). Number 26.2 тос Incorrect. You might have neglected to...