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Chapter 16 Notes II Chapter 16 Notes II Calorimetry Calorimetry
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Chapter 16 Notes II Calorimetry. What is calorimetry? Essentially, the science of measuring heat change. Using the specific heat of something you know.

Dec 23, 2015

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Francis Harmon
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Page 1: Chapter 16 Notes II Calorimetry. What is calorimetry? Essentially, the science of measuring heat change. Using the specific heat of something you know.

Chapter 16 Notes IIChapter 16 Notes IICalorimetryCalorimetry

Page 2: Chapter 16 Notes II Calorimetry. What is calorimetry? Essentially, the science of measuring heat change. Using the specific heat of something you know.

What is calorimetry?

•Essentially, the science of measuring heat change.

•Using the specific heat of something you know to find the specific heat of something you don’t.

Page 3: Chapter 16 Notes II Calorimetry. What is calorimetry? Essentially, the science of measuring heat change. Using the specific heat of something you know.

• It takes advantage of the law of conservation of energy.

What is calorimetry?

•The principal shows that heat lost by one substance has to equal heat gained by another.

Page 4: Chapter 16 Notes II Calorimetry. What is calorimetry? Essentially, the science of measuring heat change. Using the specific heat of something you know.

When a hot object is put into cool water what happens?

Object at 100oC

Water at 20oC

Final temperature

of both is 22oC

50g

250g

50g

Page 5: Chapter 16 Notes II Calorimetry. What is calorimetry? Essentially, the science of measuring heat change. Using the specific heat of something you know.

Heat lost is equal to heat gained, but temperature lost does NOT equal temperature gained

NOTICE:

Page 6: Chapter 16 Notes II Calorimetry. What is calorimetry? Essentially, the science of measuring heat change. Using the specific heat of something you know.

So, to find the specific heat of the object…

•Solve q=mCT for heat gained by water

THEN•Use q you found to solve q=mCT for the specific heat of the object.

Page 7: Chapter 16 Notes II Calorimetry. What is calorimetry? Essentially, the science of measuring heat change. Using the specific heat of something you know.

Calorimeters

•A calorimeter is a device that measures heat change.

• It can be extremely sophisticated, or as simple as two foam cups, a thermometer and water!

Page 8: Chapter 16 Notes II Calorimetry. What is calorimetry? Essentially, the science of measuring heat change. Using the specific heat of something you know.

Ghetto KPHS Style Calorimeter

Page 9: Chapter 16 Notes II Calorimetry. What is calorimetry? Essentially, the science of measuring heat change. Using the specific heat of something you know.

Bomb Calorimeter

Page 10: Chapter 16 Notes II Calorimetry. What is calorimetry? Essentially, the science of measuring heat change. Using the specific heat of something you know.

Practice Problem #1

•What is the specific heat of a metal if a 50.8g sample at 100.0oC raises the temperature of 258.2g of water from 25.2oC to 28.1oC?

Page 11: Chapter 16 Notes II Calorimetry. What is calorimetry? Essentially, the science of measuring heat change. Using the specific heat of something you know.

•What is the specific heat of a substance if a 22.6g sample at 104.5oC raises the temperature of 125.3g of water from 22.6oC to 33.1oC?

Practice Problem #2