Question #53ce8

1 Answer
Jan 29, 2018

54.9^@"C"54.9C

Explanation:

Your tool of choice here will be the equation

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

Here

  • q is the heat absorbed by the water
  • m is the mass of water
  • c is the specific heat of liquid water, equal to "4.184 J g"^(-1)""^@"C"^(-1)
  • DeltaT is the change in temperature, calculated as the difference between the final temperature and the initial temperature of the sample

Now, the idea here is that you need to figure out the initial temperature of the sample given the fact that you needed 5.19 * 10^5 "J" of heat to bring this sample to 100^@"C".

Mind you, you're going from liquid water at an initial temperature to liquid water at 100^@"C", i.e. you're not putting in any heat to convert the water to vapor at 100^@"C".

So if you take T_i""^@"C" to be the initial temperature of the water, you can say that you have

DeltaT = (100 - T_i)^@"C"

So now all you have to do is to use the equation to find the value of T_i.

q = m * c * (100 - T_i)^@"C"

Plug in your values to get

5.19 * 10^5 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("J"))) = 2750color(red)(cancel(color(black)("g"))) * 4.184 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("J"))) color(red)(cancel(color(black)("g"^(-1)))) color(red)(cancel(color(black)(""^@"C"^(-1)))) * (100 - T_i) color(red)(cancel(color(black)(""^@"C")))

Rearrange to get

2750 * 4.184 * T_i = 2750 * 4.184 * 100 - 5.19 * 10^5

You will end up with

T_i = (2750 * 4.184 * 100 - 5.19 * 10^5)/(2750 * 4.184) = 54.9

You can thus say that the initial temperature of the water was

color(darkgreen)(ul(color(black)("initial temperature" = 54.9^@"C")))

The answer is rounded to three sig figs.