21. The heat of fusion for water is 6.009 kJ/mol. The heat of vaporization is 40.05 kJ/mol. The specific heat for water is 4.184 *b. What quantity of heat must be added to convert a 127g piece of ice at 0°C into water vapor at 100ºC?

1 Answer
Apr 25, 2018

#"377.5 kJ"#.

Explanation:

To answer this question, we can split it up into #3# different "steps":

  1. #"127 g"# of ice melts into liquid water at #0 °C#.
  2. Liquid water at #0 °C# becomes liquid water at #100 °C#.
  3. Liquid water evaporates into water vapor at #100 °C#.

To find how much energy is required to melt #"127 g"# of water, we'll need to multiply the molar heat of fusion by number of moles:

#"heat of fusion" xx "number of moles" = "6.009 kJ/mol" xx "number of moles"#
#= "6.009 kJ/mol" xx "127 g"/"18.02 g/mol"#
#= "6.009 kJ/mol" xx "7.05 mol"#
#= 42.4 kJ#

Now, we can use #q=mCDeltaT# to find the heat required to convert #0°C# of water into #100 °C#.

#q = mCDeltaT = "127g" xx "4.184 J/g°C" xx (100-0) °C#
#= "127g" xx "0.004184 kJ/g°C" xx 100 °C#
#= 53.1 kJ#

Finally, to find the heat required to convert #127 g# of liquid water into water vapour, we just need to multiply the number of moles by the molar heat of vaporisation:

#"40.05 kJ/mol" xx "7.05 mol" = 282kJ#

Now, we can add all of these together to find the cumulative amount of heat that's needed:

#42.4 kJ + 53.1 kJ + 282kJ = 377.5 kJ#