Question #a5378

1 Answer
Mar 19, 2017

You will need a minimum of 119 grams of ice.

Explanation:

There are three events occurring here, and each has its own energy factor:

The ice must warm to 0°C. We will call the energy for this change E_1

The ice must melt at 0°C (without further change in temperature). We will call the energy for this change E_2

The water must cool from 10°C to 0°C. We will call the energy for this change E_3

The first two of these will require an absorption of energy. The third (which is occurring simultaneously with the other two) will supply all this energy.

Conservation of energy requires that E_3 = E_1+E_2

For the two effects that involve temperature changes, the equation is

E=mxxcxxDeltat

where m is the mass (of ice or water), c is the specific heat of the substance (you look this up) and Delta t is the temperature change.

For ice c=2.11 J/(g °C)

So E_1=m xx 2.11 xx 10 = 21.1m

For water c=4.18 J/(g °C)

This means E_3=500 xx 4.18 xx 20 = 41 800 J

Finally, to find E_2, we use the heat of fusion of water (or the heat of melting of ice if you prefer to think of it that way). This is 334 L/g.

So E_2 = mxx(334)

Putting it all together, remembering that E_3 = E_1+E_2 we get

41 800 = 21.1m + 334m = 351.1 m

resulting in m = 41 800/351.1 = 119 g