What is the final temperature when 100 g of water at 25"^oC is mixed with 75 g of water at 50"^oC?

1 Answer
Oct 10, 2016

You must remeber than total energy remains constant: the thermic energy that wins the cold water must be equal to the thermic energy that loses the hot one.

Explanation:

The heat exchanging of a system with the outside when a mass m of a material having a specific heat C_e undergoes a temperature variation Delta t is

Q = m cdot C_e cdot Delta t

Then, if we mix a mass m_1 of water (specific heat C_e (H_{2}O) = 4,18 kJ cdot kg^{- 1} cdot ºC^{- 1} ) at initial temperature t_1 with a second quantity of water, with mass m_2 and temperature t_2, the hot water will cool while the cold will warm until both reach the same temperature. Asume t_1 gt t_2 and suppose that the final temperature of the system is t. Then:

m_1 cdot C_e (H_{2}O) cdot (t_1 - t) = m_2 cdot C_e (H_{2}O) cdot (t - t_2)

Substituting the values we have:

75 cdot (50 - t) = 100 cdot (t - 25) rArr 3750 - 75 t = 100 t - 2500 rArr t = 35,7ºC