Question #6ad9d

1 Answer
Dec 11, 2016

"2250 J"2250 J

Explanation:

The key to this problem is the specific heat of aluminium

c_"Al" = color(purple)("0.899 J")/(color(green)("g")color(blue)(""^@"C"))cAl=0.899 JgC

The specific heat of a substance tells you how much heat is required to reaise the temperature of "1 g"1 g of said substance by 1^@"C"1C.

In your case, you know that you need color(purple)("0.899 J"0.899 J of heat in order to increasde the temperature of color(green)("1 g"1 g of aluminium by color(blue)(1^@"C")1C.

You can use the specific heat of aluminium to calculate how much heat would be required to raise the temperature of "500.0 g"500.0 g of aluminium by 1^@"C"1C

500.0 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("g"))) * color(purple)("0.899 J")/(color(green)(1)color(red)(cancel(color(green)("g"))) color(blue)(1^@"C")) = "449.5 J"color(blue)(""^@"C"^(-1))

This tells you that you need to provide "449.5 J" in order to raise the heat of "500.0 g" of aluminium by 1^@"C". The problem tells you that the temperature of the sample must increase by

DeltaT = 20.0^@"C" - 15.0^@"C" = 5.0^@"C"

In order to get thatto happen, you must provide it with

5.0 color(red)(cancel(color(black)(""^@"C"))) * "449.5 J"/(color(blue)(1)color(red)(cancel(color(blue)(""^@"C")))) = ul("2250 J")

The answer is rounded to three sig figs.

color(white)(a)
ALTERNATIVELY

you can also use the following equation

color(blue)(ul(color(black)(q = m * c * DeltaT)))

Here

  • q is the amount of heat gained
  • m is the mass of the sample
  • c is the specific heat of the substance
  • DeltaT is the change in temperature, defined as the difference between the final temperature and the initial temperature

In your case, you will once again end up with

q = 500.0 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("g"))) * "0.899 J" color(red)(cancel(color(black)("g"^(-1)))) color(red)(cancel(color(black)(""^@"C"^(-1)))) * (20.0 - 15.0) color(red)(cancel(color(black)(""^@"C")))

q = color(darkgreen)(ul(color(black)("2250 J")))