Ask a New Question

Question

Assume that 64.0 cal of heat is applied to a 14 g sample of sulfur at 16°C. What is the final temperature of the sample if the specific heat of sulfur is 0.175 cal/(g·°C)?
13 years ago

Answers

DrBob222
q = mass x specific heat x (Tfinal-Tinitial).
64 = 14g x 0.175 cal/g*C x (Tf-16)
Solve for Tf
13 years ago

Related Questions

how is heat lost heat flows from a hot surface to a colder surface. Heat may be lost by conduction,... what heat engine transfers heat energy from the tropics to the poles? Assume the heat absorbed by the calorimeter was 200J. What is the calorimeter constant (Heat Capacit... Assume that the specific heat and density of the resulting solution are equal to those of water [4.1... Assume that 57.0 cal of heat is applied to a 28g sample of sulfur at 27 degrees C. What is the final... Assume you can heat water with perfect insulation (all the heat from combustion of ethanol is transf... Assume that no heat is lost to the surroundings and calculate the enthalpy involved when 200. mL of... heat lost by metal + heat gained by water = 0 [mass metal x specific heat metal x (Tfinal-Tiniti... assume the specific heat capacity of water is 4.25lgk or 4200kj how many Joule is required to raise... Assume you heat 30 g of water until it all turns into gas. At standard conditions, what volume wil...
Ask a New Question
Archives Contact Us Privacy Policy Terms of Use