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I have a cup of hot coffee at 140 oC but I want to cool it to 110 oC. My cup holds about 0.3 kg of coffee. Fortunately, I have a bunch of aluminum cubes in the freezer that I can drop into my hot coffee to cool it down.

If each aluminum cube has a mass of 1 g (not 1 kg!) and my freezer keeps its contents at a temperature of –10 oC, how many cubes do I have to drop into my coffee? The specific heat of water is around 4000 joules/kg/oC and aluminum is about 900 joules/kg/oC. (Pick the answer closest to the true value and ignore any thermal losses to surroundings.)

A. 200
B. 330
C. 400
D. 110
E. 88

User Mattiast
by
5.7k points

1 Answer

5 votes

Answer:

The correct answer is option B.

Step-by-step explanation:

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


q_1=-q_2


m_1* c_1* (T_f-T_1)=-m_2* c_2* (T_f-T_2)

where,


C_1 = specific heat of metal =
900 J/kg^oC


C_2 = specific heat of coffee=
4000 J/kg^oC


m_1 = mass of metal = x


m_2 = mass of coffee = 0.3 kg


T_f = final temperature of aluminum metal=
110^oC


T_1 = initial temperature of aluminum metal =
-10^oC


T_2 = initial temperature of coffee=
140^oC

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


x* 900 J/kg^oC* (110-(-10))^oC=-(0.3 kg* 4000 J/kg^oC* (110-140)^oC


x=0.333 kg

Mass of aluminum cubes = 0.3333 kg = 333.3 g

If mass of 1 cube is 1 gram, then numbers of cubes in 333.3 grams will be:


=(333.3 g)/(1 g)=333.3\approx 330

330 cubes of aluminum cubes will be required.

User Beimenjun
by
6.7k points