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One method of generating electricity is by burning coal to heat water. If 1.00 g of coal is burned in a bomb calorimeter, and the temperature increases by 1.48 °C, calculate the heat produced by combustion of a ton of coal (2.000 × 10³ pounds) using a calorimeter with a heat capacity of 21.6 kJ/°C.

a) 1.13×10⁷kJ
b) 5.56×10⁷kJ
c) 1.13×10⁴kJ
d) 5.56×10⁴kJ

User Charnel
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1 Answer

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Final answer:

To determine the heat produced by combustion of a ton of coal in kJ, the heat capacity of the calorimeter and the temperature change from a known mass of coal are used to calculate the heat produced for 1.00 g, and then scaled up to the mass of a ton of coal, providing the approximation to the nearest option given.

Step-by-step explanation:

To calculate the heat produced by combustion of a ton of coal using a bomb calorimeter, we first need to understand the relationship between the amount of coal burned, the temperature change, and the calorimeter's heat capacity. The heat produced by burning 1.00 g of coal which results in a temperature increase of 1.48 °C in a calorimeter with a heat capacity of 21.6 kJ/°C is:

Heat produced (q) = (heat capacity of calorimeter) × (temperature change)

q = 21.6 kJ/°C × 1.48 °C

q = 31.968 kJ

Now, we convert a ton of coal (2,000 pounds) to grams, aware that 1 pound is equivalent to approximately 453.592 grams: 2,000 pounds × 453.592 g/pound = 907,184 g Then we scale up the heat produced by 1.00 g of coal to the amount produced by a ton:

Total heat for a ton of coal (Q) = (heat for 1.00 g) × (number of grams in a ton)

Q = 31.968 kJ × (907,184 g / 1.00 g)

Q = 29,007,120.512 kJ → Approximately 2.90 × 107 kJ

Hence, the correct answer for the heat produced by combustion of a ton of coal is (a) 1.13×107kJ, as none of the options provided exactly match our calculated value, but (a) is the closest approximation.

User Joselin
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