3. Consider a piece of copper of mass 17 g subjected to a temperature difference of...
18. When a piece of copper at a temperature of 256.0 °C is added to 255 grams of water at a temperature of 20.0 °C, the final temperature of the resulting mixture is 24.0 °C. If the specific heat capacity of copper is 0.385 J/g°C, calculate the mass of the piece of copper used in the experiment? The specific heat capacity of water is 4.184 J/ g• °C. (5 points)
Question 17 3 pts A 771.0-kg copper bar is put into a smelter for melting. The initial temperature of the copper is 300.0 K. How much heat must the smelter produce to completely melt the copper bar? The specific heat for copper is 386 J/kg · K, the heat of fusion for copper is 205,000 J/kg, and its melting point is 1357 K. O 3.15 x 1011kg 4.73 x 105 kJ 3.15 x 108 kJ 5.62× 105 kJ Question 18...
A piece of copper is held in a flame until it reaches thermal equilibrium. The time t takes to reach thermal equilibrium will depend on the thermal capacity of the piece of copper. Then, the piece of copper is transferred quickly to a plastic cup containing water. The thermal capacity of the cup is negligible. The following data are available. 6. Mass of copper Mass of water Rise in temperature of water Final temperature of copper Specific heat capacity of...
4. A 0.500 kg piece of copper at an initial temperature of 20.0°C is placed in a water bath and the temperature of the metal is raised to 100.0°C. Note: The specific heat capacity of copper is 385J/kg K and the latent heat of fusion is 2.07x105J/kg. a. How much heat was required to raise the temperature of the copper? e. An identical piece of heated copper (at 100.0°C) is placed in a calorimeter containing 0.500 kg of an unknown...
A 20-g ice cube floats in 210 g of water in a 100-g copper cup; all are at a temperature of 0°C. A piece of lead at 92°C is dropped into the cup, and the final equilibrium temperature is 12°C. What is the mass of the lead? (The heat of fusion and specific heat of water are 3.33 105 J/kg and 4,186 J/kg · °C, respectively. The specific heat of lead and copper are 128 and 387 J/kg · °C,...
A 38-g ice cube floats in 190 g of water in a 100-g copper cup; all are at a temperature of 0°C. A piece of lead at 96°C is dropped into the cup, and the final equilibrium temperature is 12°C. What is the mass of the lead? (The heat of fusion and specific heat of water are 3.33 105 J/kg and 4,186 J/kg · °C, respectively. The specific heat of lead and copper are 128 and 387 J/kg · °C,...
4. A 0.500 kg piece of copper at an initial temperature of 20.0°C is placed in a water bath and the temperature of the metal is raised to 100.0°C. Note: The specific heat capacity of copper is 385J/kg K and the latent heat of fusion is 2.07x1057/kg. a. How much heat was required to raise the temperature of the copper? b. How much more heat would be required to raise the copper to its melting point? C. How much heat...
Copper has a specific heat of 0.385J/(g• celsius). A piece of copper absorbs 5000J of energy and undergoes a temperature change from 100 degree celsius to 200 degree celsius. What is the mass of the piece copper?
3. A75.0 g piece of copper metal is initially at 100°C. It is dropped into a coffee cup calorimeter containing 75.0 g of water a a rature of 20.0°c. Assuming that the only heat exchange is between the copper metal and the water (no heat is given to the calorimeter), what is the final temperature of the water. Specific heat of copper 0.387 J/goC
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...