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An 80.0 g sample of metal, initially at 96.0 °C, is placed into 150.0 g of water initially at 26.0 °C in a calorimeter. The final temperature of the water is 28.1 °C. What is the identity of the metal?

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To determine the specific heat and identity of the metal, you can use the equation
q_{metal +
q_{water = 0. Calculate
q_{metal and
q_{water using the formulas
q_{metal =
m_{metal *
c_{metal * (
T_(metal)_{final-
T_(metal)_{initial) and
q_{water =
m_{water *
c_{water* (
T_(water)_{final-
T_(water)_{initial). Compare the calculated specific heat of the metal to known specific heats to determine its identity.

To determine the specific heat and identity of the metal, we can use the equation:


q_{metal +
q_{water = 0

where
q_{metal is the heat gained or lost by the metal and
q_{water is the heat gained or lost by the water. We can calculate
q_{metal using the formula:


q_{metal =
m_{metal *
c_{metal * (
T_(metal)_{final -
T_(metal)_{initial)

where
m_{metal is the mass of the metal,
c_{metal is the specific heat of the metal,
T_(metal)_{final is the final temperature of the metal, and
T_(metal)_{initial is the initial temperature of the metal. Similarly, we can calculate
q_{waterusing the formula:


q_{water =
m_{water *
c_{water * (
T_(water)_{final -
T_(water)_{initial)

where
m_{water is the mass of the water,
c_{water is the specific heat of water,
T_(water)_{final is the final temperature of the water, and
T_(water)_{initial is the initial temperature of the water.

Plugging in the given values:


m_{metal= 92.9 g


T_(metal)_{initial = 178.0 °C


T_(metal)_{final = 29.7 °C


m_{water= 75.0 mL = 75.0 g


T_(water)_{initial = 24.0 °C


T_(water)_{final = 29.7 °C


c_{water = 4.18 J/g·°C

Solving the equations, we find that
c_{metal = 0.94 J/g·°C.

To confidently determine the identity of the metal, we can compare the calculated specific heat of the metal (0.94 J/g·°C) to the known specific heat of different metals. The metal with the closest specific heat to 0.94 J/g·°C is most likely the identity of the metal.

User Andrew Park
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