A 29.80 g sample of liquid cadmium at 377.00°C is poured into a mold and allowed to cool to 24.00°C. How many kJ of energy are released in this process?
The following information is given for cadmium at 1atm:
Tb = 765.00°C Hvap (765.00°C) =889.6 J/g
Tm = 321.00°C Hfus (321.00°C) = 54.40 J/g
Specific heat solid = 0.2300 J/g °C
Specific heat liquid = 0.2640 J/g °C
(Report the answer as a positive number.)
Energy= kJ
The following information is given for cadmium at 1atm:
Tb = 765.00°C Hvap (765.00°C) =889.6 J/g
Tm = 321.00°C Hfus (321.00°C) = 54.40 J/g
Specific heat solid = 0.2300 J/g °C
Specific heat liquid = 0.2640 J/g °C
(Report the answer as a positive number.)
Energy= kJ
1 Answer
The total energy released is 4097 J (to four sig. digits) or 4.097 kJ
Explanation:
Since you calcium starts this process at 377 °C and is in liquid phase, the heat of vapourization does not enter into this. However, the heat of fusion does, as the calcium will freeze into a solid before it reaches 24 °C
So, three things happen, each of which involves a quantity of heat.
First, the liquid calcium cools from 377 °C to 321 °C. Since the specific heat for the liquid is 0.2640 J/g °C, this heat is
where
Second, the liquid freezes at 321 °C:.
Finally, the solid cools. The calculation is similar to the first one above:
(notice the change to the specific heat of the solid, and the large drop in temperature, from 321 ° to 24 °)
Total energy is the sum: