"6345 J"6345 J of energy are required to raise the temperature of water from 22.6^@"C"22.6C to 45.1^@"C"45.1C. What is the mass of the water?

1 Answer
Apr 30, 2017

The mass of water is "67.4 g"67.4 g.

Explanation:

Use the equation:

q=mcDeltat

where q is energy in Joules (J), m is mass, c is specific heat capacity, and Deltat, which is change in temperature. Deltat=T_"final"-T_"initial"

The specific heat capacity of water, c_"H2O", is not given. It is 4.184 "J"/("g"*^@"C").
https://water.usgs.gov/edu/heat-capacity.html

Organize your information.

Given
q="6345 J"
c_"H2O"=4.184 "J"/("g"*^@"C")
Deltat=("45.1"^@"C"-"22.6"^@"C")="22.5"^@"C"

Unknown: mass in grams

Solution
Rearrange the equation to isolate m. Substitute the given values into the equation and solve.

m=q/(cDeltat)

m=(6345color(red)cancel(color(black)("J")))/(4.184color(red)cancel(color(black)("J"))/("g"*^@color(red)cancel(color(black)("C")))xx22.5^@color(red)cancel(color(black)("C")))="67.4 g H"_2"O" (rounded to three significant figures)