When 1.00 g of CaCl2 is added to 50.0 g of water in a coffee-cup calorimeter,...
When 23.6 g of calcium chloride, CaCl2, was dissolved in water in a constant-pressure calorimeter, the temperature rose from 25.0 C to 38.7 C. If the heat capacity of the solution and the calorimeter is 1258 J/C, what is the enthalpy change when 0.710 mol of calcium chloride dissolves in water? The solution process is CaCl2(s) --> Ca2+(aq) + 2Cl–(aq)
PART A: A student constructs a coffee cup calorimeter and places 50.0 mL of water into it. After a brief period of stabilization, the temperature of the water in calorimeter is determined to be 19.6 °C. To this is added 50.0 mL of water that was originally a temperature of 54.5 °C. A careful plot of the recorded temperature established T0 as 31.1 °C. What is the calorimeter constant (J/°C)? DensityH2O = 1.00 g/mL Specific HeatH2O = 4.184 J/g·°C PART...
3. A student constructs a coffee cup calorimeter and places 50.0 mL of water into it. After a brief period of stabilization, the temperature of the water in the calorimeter is determined to be 22.1 "C. To this is added 50.0 mL of water that was originally at a temperature of 54.5 C. A careful plot of the temperatures recorded after this established the temperature at T, was 31.86 °C. What is the calorimeter constant in J/C for this calorimeter?...
When 16.3 g KOH is dissolved in 94.3 g of water in a coffee-cup calorimeter, the temperature rises from 18.9 °C to 30.16 °C. What is the enthalpy change per gram (in J/g) of KOH dissolved in the water? Assume that the solution has a specific heat capacity of 4.18 J/g×K. Water has a density of 1.00 g/ml. Be sure to enter the correct sign (+/-). Enter to 1 decimal place.
3. A student constructs a coffee cup calorimeter and places 50.0 mL of water into it. After a brief period of stabilization, the temperature of the water in the calorimeter is determined to be 22.7 °C. To this is added 50.0 mL of water that was originally at a temperature of 54.5 C. A careful plot of the temperatures recorded after this established the temperature at To was 30.24 C. What is the calorimeter constant in J/C for this calorimeter?...
Part A In the following experiment, a coffee-cup calorimeter containing 100 mL of H2O is used. The initial temperature of the calorimeter is 23.0 °C. If 3.10 g of CaCl2 is added to the calorimeter what will be the final temperature of the solution in the calorimeter? The heat of solution AHoln of CaCla is -82.8 kJ/mol Assume that the specific heat of the solution formed in the calorimeter is the same as that for pure water. C, 4.184 J/g...
Question #5: PART A: In the following experiment, a coffee-cup calorimeter containing 100 mL of H2O is used. The initial temperature of the calorimeter is 23.0 ∘C. If 8.90 g of CaCl2 is added to the calorimeter, what will be the final temperature of the solution in the calorimeter? The heat of solution ΔHsoln of CaCl2 is −82.8 kJ/mol. QUESTION #8: PART A: A calorimeter contains 18.0 mL of water at 12.0 ∘C . When 2.50 g of X (a...
A student constructs a coffee cup calorimeter and places 50.0 mL of water into it. After a brief period of stabilization, the temperature of the water in calorimeter is determined to be 19.9 °C. To this is added 50.0 mL of water that was originally a temperature of 54.2 °C. A careful plot of the recorded temperature established T0 as 31.9 °C. What is the calorimeter constant (J/°C)? DensityH2O = 1.00 g/mL Specific HeatH2O = 4.184 J/g·°C
When a 5.12-g sample of solid sodium nitrate dissolves in 31.1 g of water in a coffee-cup calorimeter (see above figure) the temperature falls from 25.00 oC to 16.37 oC. Calculate H in kJ/mol NaNO3 for the solution process. NaNO3(s) Na+(aq) + NO3-(aq) The specific heat of water is 4.18 J/g-K. We were unable to transcribe this imageWe were unable to transcribe this imagethermometer stirrer coffee cups containing reaction mixture When a 5.12-g sample of solid sodium nitrate dissolves in...
A 0.400 g sample of KCl(s) is added to 50.0 g of water in a calorimeter. If the temperature decreases by 0.95˚C, what is the approximate amount of heat involved in the dissolution of the KCl, assuming the heat capacity of the resulting solution is 4.18 J/g˚C?