The specific heat capacity of Albertson's Rotini Tricolore is approximately 1.8 J/g oC . Suppose you toss 340 g of this pasta (at 25oC ) into 1.5 liters of boiling water. What effect does this have on the temperature of the water (before there is time for the stove to provide more heat)?

Short Answer

Expert verified

Final temperature is 366.48 K (93.48oC )

Step by step solution

01

Given information

Specific heat capacity of water, c = 1 cal/gK = 4.186J/gK
Specific heat capacity of pasta, cpasta=1.8 J/gK
Mass of water, mWater=1500 g
Mass of pasta, mPasta= 340 g
Initial temperature of water =100oC=373.15 K
Initial temperature of pasta =25oC = 298.15K


02

Step2:Explanation

We know heat capacity is given as

C = m c

where m= mass and c= specific heat capacity

Find the heat capacity of Pasta and Water

ForWaterCwater=mwater×cwater=(1500g)×(4.186J/gK)=6279JK-1................................(1)ForPasta,Cpasta=mpasta×cpasta=(340g)×(1.8J/gK)=612J-1K-1.......................................(2)

Now find the change in temperature using

C=QΔT

For water

Cwater=QwaterΔTwater6279J·g-1K-1=QwaterΔTwater......................(3)

Similarly for Pasta

Cpasta=QpassaΔTpasta612Jg-1K-1=QpastaΔTpasta...........................(4)

Assuming no heat is lost anywhere else.

Heat lost by water is equal to heat gain by Pasta.

Q=Qpasta=-Qwater

From the equation (3) and (4)

6279J·g-1K-1=-QT-373.15...........................(5)612J·g-1K-1=QT-298.15.............................(6)

Solve for T by dividing (5) by (6), we get,

6279J.g-1K-1612J.g-1K-1=-Q/(T-373.15K)Q/(T-298.15K)T-298.15K373.15K-T=10.26T-298.15=3828.51-10.26T11.26T=4126.66T=366.48K

Temp will be increased to 93.48oC

Unlock Step-by-Step Solutions & Ace Your Exams!

  • Full Textbook Solutions

    Get detailed explanations and key concepts

  • Unlimited Al creation

    Al flashcards, explanations, exams and more...

  • Ads-free access

    To over 500 millions flashcards

  • Money-back guarantee

    We refund you if you fail your exam.

Over 30 million students worldwide already upgrade their learning with Vaia!

One App. One Place for Learning.

All the tools & learning materials you need for study success - in one app.

Get started for free

Most popular questions from this chapter

Your 200 g cup of tea is boiling-hot. About how much ice should you add to bring it down to a comfortable sipping temperature of 65°C? (Assume that the ice is initially 65°C. The specific heat capacity of ice isrole="math" localid="1650146844935" 0.5cal/g°C.

Uranium has two common isotopes, with atomic masses of 238 and 235. One way to separate these isotopes is to combine the uranium with fluorine to make uranium hexafluoride gas, UF6, then exploit the difference in the average thermal speeds of molecules containing the different isotopes. Calculate the rms speed of each type of molecule at room temperature, and compare them.


In Problem 1.16 you calculated the pressure of the earth’s atmosphere as a function of altitude, assuming constant temperature. Ordinarily, however, the temperature of the bottommost 10-15 km of the atmosphere (called the troposphere) decreases with increasing altitude, due to heating from the ground (which is warmed by sunlight). If the temperature gradient |dT/dz|exceeds a certain critical value, convection will occur: Warm, low-density air will rise, while cool, high-density air sinks. The decrease of pressure with altitude causes a rising air mass to expand adiabatically and thus to cool. The condition for convection to occur is that the rising air mass must remain warmer than the surrounding air despite this adiabatic cooling.

a. Show that when an ideal gas expands adiabatically, the temperature and pressure are related by the differential equation

dTdP=2f+2TP

b. Assume that dT/dzis just at the critical value for convection to begin so that the vertical forces on a convecting air mass are always approximately in balance. Use the result of Problem 1.16(b) to find a formula for dT/dzin this case. The result should be a constant, independent of temperature and pressure, which evaluates to approximately 10°C/km. This fundamental meteorological quantity is known as the dry adiabatic lapse rate.

If you poke a hole in a container full of gas, the gas will start leaking out. In this problem, you will make a rough estimate of the rate at which gas escapes through a hole. (This process is called effusion, at least when the hole is sufficiently small.)

  1. Consider a small portion (area = A) of the inside wall of a container full of gas. Show that the number of molecules colliding with this surface in a time interval Δtis role="math" localid="1651729685802" PAΔt/(2mvx¯), where width="12" height="19" role="math">Pis the pressure, is the average molecular mass, and vxis the average xvelocity of those molecules that collide with the wall.
  2. It's not easy to calculate vx, but a good enough approximation is (vx2¯)1/2, where the bar now represents an average overall molecule in the gas. Show that (vx2¯)1/2=kT/m.
  3. If we now take away this small part of the wall of the container, the molecules that would have collided with it will instead escape through the hole. Assuming that nothing enters through the hole, show that the number Nof molecules inside the container as a function of time is governed by the differential equation
    dNdt=A2VkTmN
    Solve this equation (assuming constant temperature) to obtain a formula of the form N(t)=N(0)et/r, where ris the “characteristic time” for N(and P) to drop by a factor of e.
  4. Calculate the characteristic time for gas to escape from a 1-liter container punctured by a 1-mm2? hole.
  5. Your bicycle tire has a slow leak so that it goes flat within about an hour after being inflated. Roughly how big is the hole? (Use any reasonable estimate for the volume of the tire.)
  6. In Jules Verne’s Around the Moon, the space travelers dispose of a dog's corpse by quickly opening a window, tossing it out, and closing the window. Do you think they can do this quickly enough to prevent a significant amount of air from escaping? Justify your answer with some rough estimates and calculations.

Calculate the total thermal energy in a liter of helium at room temperature and atmospheric pressure. Then repeat the calculation for a liter of air.

See all solutions

Recommended explanations on Physics Textbooks

View all explanations

What do you think about this solution?

We value your feedback to improve our textbook solutions.

Study anywhere. Anytime. Across all devices.

Sign-up for free