5. A 79 g sample of water at 21°C is heated until it becomes steam with...
A 104.3 g sample of water at 19.9°C is heated to steam at 127.1°C. How much heat was absorbed?
20. A 2.00x102-g sample of water at 60.0°C is heated to steam at 140.0°C. How much heat is absorbed?
A 50.0 g sample of water, initially at 25.0°C, is heated until it starts to boil. How much heat was needed to heat it to 100.0°C? The specific heat capacity of water is 4.184 J/gC. ( I don't know what formula I would use to solve this.)
Water (2850 g) is heated until it just begins to boil. If the water absorbs 5.45*10^5 of heat in the process, what was the initial temperature of the water?
A 100.0g sample of water at 20 c is heated to steam at 120c how much heat was absorbed
A 2000.00 g sample of ice at 0.0 deg. C is heated until it is liquid water at 44.0 deg. C. How much heat energy was added to the sample?
5) A 125-g sample of an unknown mineral was heated to 102.5°C and placed into a calorimeter containing 85.0 g of water at 19.5°C. The heat capacity of the calorimeter was 13.9 J/°C. The final temperature in the calorimeter was 53.0"C. What is the specific heat of the mineral? Show work for partial credit. GADT 5) A 125-g sample of an unknown mineral was heated to 102.5°C and placed into a calorimeter containing 85.0 g of water at 19.5°C. The...
+ Heating and Cooling Curves Constants Periodic Table Consider heating solid water (ice) until it becomes liquid and then gas (steam). (Figure 1) Alternatively consider the reverse process, cooling steam until it becomes water and, finally, ice. (Figure 2) In each case, two types of transitions occur, those involving a temperature change with no change in phase (shown by the diagonal line segments on the graphs) and those at constant temperature with a change in phase (shown by horizontal line...
a 312 g sample of a metal is heated to 355.272 c A 312 g sample of a metal is heated to 355.272 °C and plunged into 200 g of water at a temperature of 45.471 °C. The final temperature of the water is 59.19 °C. Assuming water has a specific heat capacity of 4.184 J/g °C, what is the specific heat capacity of the metal sample, in J/g °C)? Assume no heat loss to the surroundings. Report your response...
A 5.90 g sample of solid CaHPO4⋅2H2O was heated such that the water turned to steam and was driven off. Assuming ideal behavior, what volume would that steam occupy at 1.00 atm and 100.0 °C?