Asked by jhope
If it requires 115 J of heat to increase the temperature of 2.17 moles of a solid metal from 24.37 °C to 26.32 °C at constant pressure, then what is the identity of the metal?
Answers
Answered by
DrBob222
Look up the Law of Dulong and Petit
Answered by
jhope
hmm never learned those, but thanks
Answered by
jhope
still confused..
Answered by
jhope
yeah, not sure how to solve it. ive subtracted the temp, but what do i do with the mols and J?
Answered by
DrBob222
First you find the specific heat, then use the law of Dulong and Petit.
q = mass x specific heat x (Tfinal-Tinitial)
115 = etc etc. Solve for specific heat.
q = mass x specific heat x (Tfinal-Tinitial)
115 = etc etc. Solve for specific heat.
Answered by
sara
so 115 = n/M(1.95)(specific heat)?
Answered by
DrBob222
OK. So 115 = 2.17 mols x specific heat x 1.95
Solve for specific heat.
The Law of D and P says
specific heat x atomic mass = about 25. I think the average is 24.94
Solve for specific heat.
The Law of D and P says
specific heat x atomic mass = about 25. I think the average is 24.94
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