Modified Mastering Chemistry with Pearson eText -- Standalone Access Card -- for Introductory Chemistry: Concepts and Critical Thinking (8th Edition)
8th Edition
ISBN: 9780134553146
Author: Charles H Corwin
Publisher: PEARSON
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Question
Chapter 11, Problem 87E
Interpretation Introduction
Interpretation:
The heat required to vaporize
Concept introduction:
Specific heat is the property of a pure substance. Specific heat is the heat flow required to change the temperature of
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Modified Mastering Chemistry with Pearson eText -- Standalone Access Card -- for Introductory Chemistry: Concepts and Critical Thinking (8th Edition)
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- 5-81 Compare the number of calories absorbed when 100. g of ice at 0°C is changed to liquid water at 37°C with the number of calories absorbed when 100. g of liquid water is warmed from 0°C to 37°C.arrow_forwardThe amount of heat required to melt 2 lbs of ice is twice the amount of heat required to melt 1 lb of ice. Is this observation a macroscopic or microscopic description of chemical behavior? Explain your answer.arrow_forward1. Which of the following processes requires the largest input of energy as heat? raising the temperature of 100 g of water by 1.0 °C vaporization of 0.10 g of water at 100 °C melting 1.0 g of ice at 0 °C warming 1.0 g of ice from −50 °C to 0 °C (specific heat of ice = 2.06 J/g · K)arrow_forward
- Will a closed container of water at 70 C or an open container of water at the same temperature cool faster on a cold winter day? Explain why.arrow_forwardA quantity of ice at 0C is added to 64.3 g of water in a glass at 55C. After the ice melted, the temperature of the water in the glass was 15C. How much ice was added? The heat of fusion of water is 6.01 kJ/mol and the specific heat is 4.18 J/(g C).arrow_forwardIn each of the following groups of substances, pick the one that has the given property. Justify your answer. a. highest boiling point: HBr, Kr, or Cl2 b. highest freezing point: H2O, NaCl, or HF c. lowest vapor pressure at 25C: Cl2, Br2, or I2 d. lowest freezing point: N2, CO, or CO2 e. lowest boiling point: CH4, CH3CH3, or CH3CH2CH3 f. highest boiling point: HF, HCl, or HBr g.arrow_forward
- On a hot day, you take a six-pack ot a on a pcmc, cooling it with ice. Each empty (aluminum) can weighs 12.5 g. A can contains 12.0 oz of soda. The specific heat of aluminum is 0.902 J/g C; take that of soda to be 4.10 J/g C. (a) How much heat must be absorbed from the six-pack to lower the temperature from 25.00 to 5.00C? (b) How much ice must be melted to absorb this amount of heat? (Hfus of ice is given in Table 8.2.)arrow_forwardSublimation is the phase change from solid to gas without going through a liquid phase. Solid CO2, called dry ice, is an example of one substance that sublimed. Use Hesss law to show that the enthalpy of sublimation, subH, is equal to fusH vapH.arrow_forwardTrichloroethane, C2H3Cl3 is used as a degreaser (solvent for waxes and oils). Its density is 1.435 g/mL and its vapor pressure at 20C is 124 mm Hg. (a) How many mL will vaporize in an evacuated 1.50-L flask at 20C? (b) A 3.00-mL sample is poured into an evacuated 1.5-L flask at 20C. Will all the liquid vaporize? If not, what is the pressure in the flask? (c) A similar 3.00-mL sample is poured into an evacuated 20.00-L flask at 20C. What physical state(s) is/are in the flask?arrow_forward
- Liquid butane, C4H10, is stored in cylinders to be used as a fuel. Suppose 35.5 g of butane gas is removed from a cylinder. How much heat must be provided to vaporize this much gas? The heat of vaporization of butane is 21.3 kJ/mol.arrow_forward5-86 Using the phase diagram of water (Figure 5-20), describe the process by which you can sublime 1 g of ice at-10°C and at 1 atm pressure to water vapor at the same temperature.arrow_forward
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