Respuesta :
The specific heat of aluminum is actually simply a diversion. Because we can directly compute for the specific heat of copper using the formula:
ΔH = m C ΔT
where ΔH is change in enthalpy or heat lost, m is mass, C is specific heat and ΔT is change in temp
4,600 J = 150 g * C * (100 °C - 20°C)
C = 0.38 J/g°C
Answer:
0.383 J/g°C
Explanation:
The heat emitted by the copper ball while cooling down is given by:
[tex]Q=m C_s \Delta T[/tex]
where:
m = 150 g is the mass of the ball
Cs = ? is the specific heat of copper
[tex]\Delta T=100^{\circ}C-20^{\circ}C=80^{\circ}C[/tex] is the change in temperature
We know that the heat lost by the copper ball is
[tex]Q=4.6 kJ=4600 J[/tex]
So we can re-arrange the formula to find the specific heat capacity:
[tex]C_s = \frac{Q}{m \Delta T}=\frac{4600 J}{(150 g)(80^{\circ} C)}=0.383 J/g^{\circ}C[/tex]