At constant volume, the heat of combustion of a particular compound, compound A, is −3294.0 kJ/mol. When 1.127 g of compound A (molar mass = 109.35 g/mol) is burned in a bomb calorimeter, the temperature of the calorimeter (including its contents) rose by 7.283 °C.
What is the heat capacity (calorimeter constant) of the calorimeter?
Suppose a 3.157- g sample of a second compound, compound B, is combusted in the same calorimeter, and the temperature rises from 23.23 °C to 28.720 °C.
What is the heat of combustion per gram of compound B?
At constant volume, the heat of combustion of a particular compound, compound A, is −3294.0 kJ/mol....
At constant volume, the heat of combustion of a particular compound is −3796.0 kJ/mol.−3796.0 kJ/mol. When 1.277 g1.277 g of this compound (molar mass=107.98 g/mol)(molar mass=107.98 g/mol) was burned in a bomb calorimeter, the temperature of the calorimeter, including its contents, rose by 4.263 ∘C.4.263 ∘C. What is the heat capacity (calorimeter constant) of the calorimeter?
At constant volume, the heat of combustion of a particular compound is -3952.0 kJ/mol. When 1.211 g of this compound (molar mass = 130.08 g/mol) was burned in a bomb calorimeter, the temperature of the calorimeter (including its contents) rose by 4.453 ◦C. What is the heat capacity (calorimeter constant) of the calorimeter?-qrxn = qcalorimeterWhat is the formula for heat (q) for the calorimeter?___________________Did the calorimeter absorb/release heat? Circle your answer.Calculate the energy absorbed by the calorimeter.Solve:
At constant volume, the heat of combustion of a particular compound is-3252.0 kJímol. When 1.525 g of this compound (molar mass 156.87 g/mol) was burned in a bomb calorimeter, the temperature of the calorimeter (including its contents) rose by 7.211 °C. What is the heat capacity (calorimeter constant) of the calorimeter? Number kJ/o C
Please help me with this question, significant figures matter At constant volume, the heat of combustion of a particular compound is –3791.0 kJ/mol. When 1.479 g of this compound (molar mass is 142.16 g/mol) was burned in a bomb calorimeter, the temperature of the calorimeter (including its contents) rose by 6.637 °C. What is the heat capacity of the calorimeter? heat capacity: kJC
Under constant-volume conditions the heat of combustion of benzoic acid (C6H5COOH) is 26.38 kJ/g. A 2.740?g sample of benzoic acid is burned in a bomb calorimeter. The temperature of the calorimeter increases from 21.40?C to 29.97?C. What is the total heat capacity of the calorimeter? A 1.460?g sample of a new organic substance is combusted in the same calorimeter. The temperature of the calorimeter increases from 22.14 ?C to 27.09 ?C. What is the heat of combustion per gram of...
Under constant-volume conditions the heat of combustion of benzoic acid (C6H5COOH) is 26.38 kJ/g. A 2.790 −g sample of benzoic acid is burned in a bomb calorimeter. The temperature of the calorimeter increases from 21.60 ∘C to 29.95 ∘C. A. What is the total heat capacity of the calorimeter? B. A 1.460 −g sample of a new organic substance is combusted in the same calorimeter. The temperature of the calorimeter increases from 22.14 ∘C to 27.09 ∘C. What is the...
Determine the heat of combustion of sucrose (C12H22O11) in kJ/mol if 2.00g of sucrose is burned in a bomb calorimeter, and the temperature of the calorimeter rose from 25.33C to 28.17C. The heat capacity of the calorimeter is 11.6kJ/C.
A quantity of 1.922 g of methanol (CH3OH) was burned in a constant-volume bomb calorimeter. Consequently, the temperature rose by 5.52°C. If the heat capacity of the bomb plus water was 8.75 kJ / °C, calculate the molar heat of combustion of methanol.
Ignition wires heat sample Thermometer Stirrer A bomb calorimeter, or constant volume calorimeter, is a device often used to determine the heat of combustion of fuels and the energy content of foods. Since the "bomb" itself can absorb energy, a separate experiment is needed to determine the heat capacity of the calorimeter This is known as calibrating the calorimeter In the laboratory a student burns a 0.319-g sample of phenanthrene (C14H10 in a bomb calorimeter containing 1070. g of water....
A bomb calorimeter, or a constant volume calorimeter, is a device often used to determine the heat of combustion of fuels and the energy content of foods. In an experiment, a 0.3320 g sample of naphthalene (C10Hg) is burned completely in a bomb calorimeter. The calorimeter is surrounded by 1.092x103 g of water. During the combustion the temperature increases from 22.54 to 25.04 °C. The heat capacity of water is 4.184 Jg=1°C-1 The heat capacity of the calorimeter was determined...