asked 190k views
4 votes
A sample of an unknown substance has a mass of 0.158 kg. If 2,510.0 J of heat is required to heat the substance from 32.0°C to 61.0°C, what is the specific heat of the substance?

asked
User Fizzer
by
7.8k points

2 Answers

3 votes

Answer: 0.469 J / g°C

Step-by-step explanation:

1) Data:

m = 0.158 kg

Q = 2,150.0 J

ΔT = 61.0°C - 32.0°C

Cs = ?

2) Formula:

Q = m×Cs×ΔT

3) Solution

i) Solve for Cs: Cs = Q / [m×ΔT]

ii) Plug in the data and compute

Cs = 2,150.0 J / [158 g × (61.0°C - 32.0°C) ] = 0.469 J / g°C

answered
User Steven De Groote
by
8.1k points
2 votes
The specific of the unknown substance that underwent a change in temperature is 0.567 J/g-C. This was solved using the equation for heat transfer which is:

U = mCp(Tf-Ti)

where:
U = heat absorbed or released in joules
m = mass in grams
Cp = specific heat in J/g-C
Tf = final temperature
Ti = initial temperature

Substituting values and converting 0.158 kg to grams gives the value 0.567 J/g-C. You can use a table of specific heat values to determine what the substance is as well.
answered
User Tomas Walch
by
8.8k points
Welcome to Qamnty — a place to ask, share, and grow together. Join our community and get real answers from real people.