3. The specific heat of methane gas is 2.20 J/g • °C. If the temperature of...
The following is a list of specific heat capacities of a few metals. copper-0.385 J/g."C tin-0.222 J/g.°C iron = 0.450 J/g·°C aluminum 0.897 J/g."C gold 0.129 J/g.°c A 51.2 g sample of an unknown metal is heated with 758 J. If the temperature of the metal increases by 16.5 °C, what is the identity of the unknown metal?
The table lists the specific heat capacities of select substances. Substance Specific heat capacity (J/g °C) lead 0.128 silver 0.235 copper 0.385 iron 0.449 aluminum 0.903 water 4.184 An unknown substance has a mass of 13.3 g. The temperature of the substance increases by 16.7 °C when 52.2 J of heat is added to the substance. What is the most likely identity of the substance? O lead O aluminum iron O copper water O silver
Perd cific Zinc has a specific heat of 0.39 J/g °C while iron has a spe- cific heat of 0.45 J/g °C. If a 100-g sample of each metal is cooled from 100 °C to room temperature (25 °C), which one releases more heat energy? 50. Th deg ab 10 51. An engineer tests the thermal properties of a metal alloy. Using a 50.0-g sample, she finds that adding 485 J of heat energy to the alloy causes a temperature...
An unknown metal has a mass of 32.6 g. When 983 J of heat are added to the sample, the sample temperature changes by 40.2°C. Calculate the specific heat of the unknown metal. Specific heat (J/g* C) Metal potassium 0.750 silver 0.240 lead 0.160 specific heat: J/(g C) barium 0.204 calcium 0.650 What is the possible identity of the metal based on the calcium 0.650 calculated specific heat? O potassium lead silver Ocalcium
The specific heat capacity of silver is 0.24 J/°C .g. (a) Calculate the energy required to raise the temperature of 140.0 g Ag from 273 K to 305 K. (b) Calculate the energy required to raise the temperature of 1.0 mol Ag by 1.0°C (called the molar heat capacity of silver). O J/mol°C (c) It takes 1.35 kJ of energy to heat a sample of pure silver from 12.0°C to 15.3°C. Calculate the mass of the sample of silver. 9
Identify an unknown metal by determining its specific heat capacity (Csp). It takes 26,347 J of heat to raise the temperature of 253.5 grams of the unknown metal from 31.4°C to 146.5°C. Determine the Csp and then use the adjacent table to identify the metal.de Date: city (Cs). of the then use the TABLE 6.4 Specific Heat Capacities of Some Common Substances Specific Heat Capacity, Cs Substance (J/g °C)* Elements 0.128 Lead 0.128 Gold Silver 0.235 0.385 sorto no 12...
Question 4 of 8 > Substance lead Specific heat capacity (J/g °C) 0.128 0.235 0.385 silver copper iron 0.449 aluminum 0.903 4.184 water An unknown substance has a mass of 18.9 g. The temperature of the substance increases by 18.3 °C when 81.3 J of heat is added to the substance. What is the most likely identity of the substance? O aluminum silver O water O copper
Table 1. Selected Properties of Some Metals Atomic Mass Specific Heat (J/g°C) Color or Metal Density (g/mol) Appearance Magnesium 24.31 1.02 Shiny gray metallic 1.738 g/cm Aluminum 26.98 0.90 Silvery gray metallic 2.70 g/cm Nickel 58.69 0.44 Silver, gold tinge metallic 8.908 g/cm Copper 63.55 0.38 Lustrous red-orange 8.96 g/cm Zinc 65.38 0.51 Silver-gray metallic 7.14 g/cm 107.87 Shiny white metallic 10.49 g/cm Silver 0.24 Gold 196.87 0.13 Metallic yellow 19.30 g/cm 9.78 g/cm 0.12 Lustrous brownish silver Bismuth 208.98...
Specific heat J/(g·℃) The temperature of a sample of copper increased by 24.0 °C Substance when 255 J of heat was applied. SubstanceSpecific heat J/(g·℃)lead0.128silver0.235copper0.385iron0.449aluminum0.903What is the mass of the sample? m = _______ g
PART A It takes 47.0 J to raise the temperature of an 10.9 g piece of unknown metal from 13.0∘C to 24.8 ∘C. What is the specific heat for the metal?Express your answer with the appropriate units. PART B The molar heat capacity of silver is 25.35 J/mol⋅∘C. How much energy would it take to raise the temperature of 10.9 g of silver by 11.2 ∘C?Express your answer with the appropriate units. PART C What is the specific heat of...