Ask Question
12 January, 18:20

A 100 g piece of aluminum is heated to 90°C. It is then dropped into water to bring its temperature down to 20°C. The heat transferred to water is 6300 J. What is the specific heat capacity of aluminum?

+3
Answers (2)
  1. 12 January, 18:57
    0
    0.90 J/g°C

    Explanation:

    The specific heat capacity is the ratio of the heat transferred to the product of the mass of the object and the change in temperature. So the specific heat capacity of aluminum is 6300 / (100 * 70) = 0.90 J/g°C.
  2. 12 January, 21:13
    0
    c = 0.9 j/g. °C

    Explanation:

    Given dа ta:

    Mass of aluminium = 100 g

    Initial temperature = 90 °C

    Final temperature = 20°C

    Heat transfer = 6300 J

    Specific heat of aluminium = ?

    Solution:

    Formula:

    Q = m. c. ΔT

    Q = amount of heat absorbed or released

    m = mass of given substance

    c = specific heat capacity of substance

    ΔT = change in temperature

    The Q will negative because metal release the heat.

    c = Q / m. ΔT

    ΔT = t2 - t1

    ΔT = 20°C - 90 °C

    ΔT = - 70 °C

    c = - 6300 j / 100 g.-70°C

    c = - 6300 j / - 7000 g.°C

    c = 0.9 j/g. °C
Know the Answer?
Not Sure About the Answer?
Find an answer to your question ✅ “A 100 g piece of aluminum is heated to 90°C. It is then dropped into water to bring its temperature down to 20°C. The heat transferred to ...” in 📘 Chemistry if you're in doubt about the correctness of the answers or there's no answer, then try to use the smart search and find answers to the similar questions.
Search for Other Answers