Question #de7a7

1 Answer
Sep 17, 2017

140^@"C"

Explanation:

The key here is the specific heat of glass because it tells you the amount of heat needed in order to increase the mass of "1 g" of glass by 1^@"C".

c_"glass" = "0.50 J g"^(-1)""^@"C"^(-1)

So, you know that in order to increase the temperature of "1 g" of glass by 1^@"C", you need to supply it with "0.50 J" of energy.

Now, your sample has a mass of "103.2 g". Use the specific heat of glass to calculate how much heat is needed to increase the temperature of this sample

103.2 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("g"))) * overbrace("0.50 J"/(1 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("g"))) * 1^@"C"))^(color(blue)("the specific heat of glass")) = "51.6 J"""^@"C"^(-1)

This tells you that in order to increase the temperature of "103.2 g" of glass by 1^@"C", you need to provide "51.6 J".

In your case, "6375 J" will increase the temperature of "103.2 g" of glass by

6375 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("J"))) * (1^@"C")/(51.6 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("J")))) = 123.55^@"C"

At this point, you should round the value to two sig figs because that's how many sig figs you have for the specific heat of glass.

So you will have

123.55^@"C" ~~ 120^@"C"

Since this represents the increase in temperature that corresponds to a "103.2-g" sample of glass that absorbs "6375 J", you can say that the final temperature of the glass will be

T_"final" = 20.0^@"C" + 120^@"C" = color(darkgreen)(ul(color(black)(140^@"C")))

The answer cannot have any decimal places because 120^@"C" does not have any decimal places.