Saturday, November 23, 2019
Find a Reactions Final Temperature With Specific Heat
Find a Reaction's Final Temperature With Specific Heat          This example problem demonstrates how to calculate the final temperature of a substance when given the amount of energy used, the mass and initial temperature.          Problem      300 grams of ethanol at 10 à °C is heated with 14640 Joules of energy. What is the final temperature of the ethanol?         Useful Information: The specific heat of ethanol is 2.44 J/gà ·Ã °C.          Solution      Use the formula         q  mcÃâT         Where         q  Heat Energym  Massc  Specific HeatÃâT  Change in temperature.         14640 J  (300 g)(2.44 J/gà ·Ã °C)ÃâT         Solve for ÃâT:         ÃâT  14640 J/(300 g)(2.44 J/gà ·Ã °C)ÃâT  20 à °CÃâT  Tfinal - TinitialTfinal  Tinital  ÃâTTfinal  10 à °C  20 à °CTfinal  30 à °C         Answer:à  The final temperature of the ethanol is 30 à °C.          Final Temperature After Mixing      When you mix together two substances with different initial temperatures, the same principles apply. If the materials dont chemically react, all you need to do to find the final temperature is to assume that both substances will eventually reach the same temperature.         Problem         Find the final temperature when 10.0 grams of aluminum at 130.0 à °C mixes with 200.0 grams of water at 25 à °C. Assume no water is lost as water vapor.         Solution         Again, you use q  mcÃâT, except you assume qaluminum  qwater and solve for T, which is the final temperature. You need to look up the specific heat values (c) for aluminum and water. This solution uses 0.901 for aluminum and 4.18 for water:         (10)(130 - T)(0.901)  (200.0)(T - 25)(4.18)T  26.12 à °C    
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