How much energy (in joules) is required to raise the temperature of 200g of liquid water from 20c to 50 c?

Heat Capacity of liquid water: 4.2 J/(g*K)

Latent Heat of fusion of water: 330 J/g

Latent heat of vaporization of water: 2200 J/g

2 Answers
Feb 11, 2018

25200J

Explanation:

E = mcDeltatheta

where c is specific heat capacity in J//g//K

(specific heat capacity: the amount of energy needed to raise the temperature of 1g of a substance by 1K)

and Deltatheta is the change in temperature.

here, Deltatheta = 50^@C - 20^@C = 30^@C.

E = 200g * 4.2 J//g//K * 30K

= 25200J

Feb 12, 2018

It's about 25 kJ - make sure you're consistent in your units.

Explanation:

The calculation is E=M.c.theta

Where E is the energy in J, M is the mass of substance in g, c is the specific heat (of water in this case) in J/(g.K}, and theta is the temperature change (which can be in celcius or kelvin - if you're only looking at the delta between the two temperatures it makes no odds which unit you choose).

So it works out like this

E=M.c.theta
E=200 times 4.2 times30

So E= 25,200 J (or 25.2 kJ).