Question #fe189
1 Answer
Explanation:
A substance's heat of vaporization,
In your case, water is said to have a heat of vaporization of
#DeltaH_"vap" = "42 kJ mol"^(-1)#
This tells you that in order to convert one mole of water from liquid to gas at its boiling point you must supply it with
Now, when water condenses it releases heat. More specifically, it releases the same amount of heat it absorbed when it evaporated at its boiling point.
#"liquid " stackrel(color(white)(+)color(blue)(DeltaH_"vap")color(white)(aaaaa))(->) " vapor"#
#"liquid " stackrel(color(white)(a)color(blue)(-DeltaH_"vap")color(white)(aaaa))(larr) " vapor"#
When water condenses, the heat of condensation is equal to
#DeltaH_"cond" = -DeltaH_"vap"#
The minus sign is used because it denotes heat released.
So, the first thing to do here is use water's molar mass to determine how many moles of water you have in that
#3.0 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("g"))) * ("1 mole H"_2"O")/(18.015color(red)(cancel(color(black)("g")))) = "0.1665 moles H"_2"O"#
Since
#0.1665 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("moles H"_2"O"))) * "42 kJ"/(1color(red)(cancel(color(black)("mole H"_2"O")))) = color(green)(|bar(ul(color(white)(a/a)color(black)("7.0 kJ")color(white)(a/a)|)))#
The answer is rounded to two sig figs.
So, when