A 29.950 g sample of an unknown metal is heated to 100.0 °c. The metal is then poured into 50.0 g of water in an insulated coffee cup calorimeter. The temperature of water rises from 25.0 ºc to 27.7 ºc. What is the specific heat of the metal?

Respuesta :

General metal is highly heat temperature

Answer : The specific heat of metal is, [tex]0.261J/g^oC[/tex]

Explanation :

In this problem we assumed that heat given by the hot body is equal to the heat taken by the cold body.

[tex]q_1=-q_2[/tex]

[tex]m_1\times c_1\times (T_f-T_1)=-m_2\times c_2\times (T_f-T_2)[/tex]

where,

[tex]c_1[/tex] = specific heat of unknown metal = ?

[tex]c_2[/tex] = specific heat of water = [tex]4.18J/g^oC[/tex]

[tex]m_1[/tex] = mass of unknown metal = 29.950 g

[tex]m_2[/tex] = mass of water = 50.0 g

[tex]T_f[/tex] = final temperature of water = [tex]27.7^oC[/tex]

[tex]T_1[/tex] = initial temperature of unknown metal = [tex]100^oC[/tex]

[tex]T_2[/tex] = initial temperature of water = [tex]25.0^oC[/tex]

Now put all the given values in the above formula, we get

[tex]29.950g\times c_1\times (27.7-100)^oC=-50.0g\times 4.18J/g^oC\times (27.7-25.0)^oC[/tex]

[tex]c_1=0.261J/g^oC[/tex]

Therefore, the specific heat of metal is, [tex]0.261J/g^oC[/tex]