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70 POINTS NEED HELP ASAP. ONLY CORRECT ANSWERS PLEASE.

A calorimeter was filled with 200 g of water. The temperature of the water in the calorimeter dropped from 55.0 °Celsius to 22.6 °Celsius. The specific heat of water is 4.184 J/g°C. Calculate, q, the heat released by the reaction.

A. -27,112 J
B. -2710 J
C. 1891 J
D. 18,911 J

User Jrochette
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1 Answer

1 vote

Answer:

A

Step-by-step explanation:

We can use the heat transfer equation:


\displaystyle q = mC\Delta T

Therefore:

\displaystyle \begin{aligned} q_\text{sol} & = m_\text{sol}C_\text{sol}\Delta T \\ \\ & = (200.\text{ g})\left(\frac{4.184\text{ J}}{\text{g - $^\circ$C}}\right)(22.6\text{ $^\circ$C}-55.0\text{ $^\circ$ C}) \\ \\ &= (200.\text{ g})\left(\frac{4.184\text{ J}}{\text{g - $^\circ$C}}\right)(-32.4\text{ $^\circ$C}) \\ \\ & \approx -27112 \text{ J} \end{aligned}

In conclusion, the answer is A.

Note: Assuming that the reaction took place in the water, the heat released by the reaction should be positive instead of negative. Because the temperature of the water decreased, the reaction is endothermic. Hence, the water lost heat (what we calculated above) while the reaction absorbed heat. The heat released (or, rather, absorbed) by the reaction is thus +27,112 J. However, for the purposes of this question, A is the best choice.

User Tuan Vo
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