60.1k views
2 votes
Calculate the energy needed to raise the temperature of 18.0g of water from 10.0C to 40.0C. The specific heat of water is 4.18 J/gC. *

1 Answer

3 votes

Answer:

The energy needed to raise the temperature 18.0 grams of water is from 10.0°C to 40.0°C is 2,257.2 Joules.

Step-by-step explanation:


Q=mc\Delta T=mc* (T_2-T_1)

Where:

Q = heat absorbed or heat lost

c = specific heat of substance

m = Mass of the substance

ΔT = change in temperature of the substance


T_1,T_2 : Initial and final temperature of the substance

We have mass of water = m = 18.0 g

Specific heat of water= c = 4.18 J/g°C

Initial and final temperature of the water=
T_1=10.0^oC

Final temperature of the water=
T_2=40.0^oC

Heat absorbed by the water:


Q=18.0g* 4.18/g^oC* (40.0^oC-10.0^oC)=2,257.2 J

The energy needed to raise the temperature 18.0 grams of water is from 10.0°C to 40.0°C is 2,257.2 Joules.

User Stimsoni
by
7.7k points