A well lagged copper calorimeter of mass 120g contains 70g of water and 10g of ice both at 0 degrees Celsius. Dry steam at 100 degrees Celsius is passed in until the temperature of the mixture Is 40 degrees Celsius. Calculate the mass of steam condensed.
*specific latent heat of fusion of ice=3.2×10²J/g
*specific latent heat of vaporisation of steam=2.2×10³J/g
*specific heat capacity of copper=4.0×10(raised to power minus one)J/g/k
Specific heat capacity of water=4.2J/g/k
All grams to be changed to kilograms​

Respuesta :

Answer:

7.6 g

Explanation:

"Well lagged" means insulated, so there's no heat transfer between the calorimeter and the surroundings.

The heat gained by the copper, water, and ice = the heat lost by the steam

Heat gained by the copper:

q = mCΔT

q = (120 g) (0.40 J/g/K) (40°C − 0°C)

q = 1920 J

Heat gained by the water:

q = mCΔT

q = (70 g) (4.2 J/g/K) (40°C − 0°C)

q = 11760 J

Heat gained by the ice:

q = mL + mCΔT

q = (10 g) (320 J/g) + (10 g) (4.2 J/g/K) (40°C − 0°C)

q = 4880 J

Heat lost by the steam:

q = mL + mCΔT

q = m (2200 J/g) + m (4.2 J/g/K) (100°C − 40°C)

q = 2452 J/g m

Plugging the values into the equation:

1920 J + 11760 J + 4880 J = 2452 J/g m

18560 J = 2452 J/g m

m = 7.6 g