Calculate the heat absorbed by 125 g of water (SH = 1.00 cal/g°C) when the temperature rises from 21.0°C to 35.0°C?

1 Answer
Jan 29, 2018

"1750cal"1750cal, 7320J7320J, or 7.32kJ7.32kJ

Explanation:

In this question, we'll need to use this equation:

q=mCDeltaT

where q is the heat energy gained or lost by a substance
m is the mass of the substance, C the specific heat of that substance,
and DeltaT the change in temperature (celsius).

For a more thorough explanation, check out this great answer!

In our case, we need to calculate q given "125g", a specific heat of "1 cal/g°C", and the initial and final temperature of 21.0°C and 35.0°C.
DeltaT is "final temperature - initial temperature", so it would be "35°C - 21°C = 14°C".

Now, just plug everything in and find q:
q=mcDeltaT
q="125g ⋅ 1 cal/g°C ⋅ 14°C"
q="1750cal"

If we wanted to convert that to Joules, which is the SI unit for energy, we would multiply it by 4.184.

q="1750cal" = (1750*4.184)J = 7322J

Since 3 significant figures are given in the question, we should only have 3 significant figures in the answer. That makes it 7320J.

We could also convert this to kilojoules by dividing it by 1000.
(7320J)/1000=7.32kJ