Respuesta :
Answer:
232 J
Explanation:
Heat gained = mass × specific heat × increase in temperature
q = m C (T − T₀)
Given m = 75.1 g, C = 0.14 J/g/°C, T = 53.8°C, and T₀ = 31.7°C:
q = (75.1 g) (0.14 J/g/°C) (53.8°C − 31.7°C)
q = 232 J
Answer:
[tex]Q=232.36J[/tex]
Explanation:
The heat capacity (C) of a physical system depends on the amount of substance of that system. For a system formed by a single homogeneous substance, it is defined as:
[tex]C=mc(1)[/tex]
Here m is the mass of the system and c is the specific heat capacity.
The heat capacity is defined as the ratio between the heat absorbed by the system and the resulting temperature change:
[tex]C=\frac{Q}{\Delta T}(2)[/tex]
We equal (1) and (2) and solve for Q:
[tex]\frac{Q}{\Delta T}=mc\\Q=mc\Delta T\\Q=mc(T_f-T_i)\\Q=75.1g(0.14\frac{J}{g^\circ C})(53.8^\circ C-31.7^\circ C)\\Q=232.36J[/tex]