Introduction to General, Organic and Biochemistry
Introduction to General, Organic and Biochemistry
11th Edition
ISBN: 9781285869759
Author: Frederick A. Bettelheim, William H. Brown, Mary K. Campbell, Shawn O. Farrell, Omar Torres
Publisher: Cengage Learning
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Chapter 1, Problem 1.66P

1-66 How many calories are required to heat the following (specific heats are given in Table 1-4)?

(a) 52.7 g of aluminum from 100oC to 285oC

(b) 93.6 g of methanol from —35oC to 55oC

(c) 3.4 kg of lead from —33oC to 730oC

(d) 71.4 g of ice from —77oC to —5oC

Expert Solution
Check Mark
Interpretation Introduction

(a)

Interpretation:

Heat required rise temperature of aluminum from 100 to 285 ° C should be calculated.

Concept Introduction:

Heat required can be calculate using the following formula:

Q = m s ΔT

Where, q is heat required,

m is mass of substance in g,

s is specific heat capacity of the substance and,

ΔT is change in temperature.

Answer to Problem 1.66P

The heat required is 2145 cal.

Explanation of Solution

Given Information:

The mass of aluminum is 52.7 g and change in temperature takes place from 100 ° C to 285 ° C. The value of specific heat capacity of Al from table 1-4 is 0.22 cal/gC°

For aluminum, heat required can be calculated as follows:

Q = m s ΔT(52.7 g)(0.22 cal/g °C)(285 °C100 °C)= 2145 cal.

Expert Solution
Check Mark
Interpretation Introduction

(b)

Interpretation:

Heat required rise temperature of methanol from − 35 to 55 ° C should be calculated.

Concept Introduction:

Heat required can be calculate using the following formula:

Q = m s ΔT

Where, q is heat required,

m is mass of substance in g,

s is specific heat capacity of the substance and,

ΔTis change in temperature.

Answer to Problem 1.66P

Heat required is 5140 cal.

Explanation of Solution

Given Information:

Mass of methanol is 93.6 g, change in temperature takes place from 35°Cto 55°Cand specific heat capacity of methanol from table 1-4 is 0.61 cal/g °C

For methanol, heat required can be calculated as follows:

Q = m s ΔT(93.6 g)( 0.61 cal/g °C)(55 °C(35°C)) 5140 cal

Expert Solution
Check Mark
Interpretation Introduction

(c)

Interpretation:

Heat required to rise the temperature of lead from − 33 to 730 ° C should be calculated.

Concept Introduction:

Heat required can be calculate using the following formula:

Q = m s ΔT

Where, q is heat required,

m is mass of substance in g,

s is specific heat capacity of the substance and,

ΔTis change in temperature.

Answer to Problem 1.66P

Heat required is 80420 cal.

Explanation of Solution

Given Information:

Mass of lead is 3.4 kg, change in temperature takes place from -33 to 730 ° C and specific heat capacity from table 1-4 is 0.031 cal/g °C

For Lead, heat required can be calculated as follows:

Q = m s ΔT= 3.4 kg(1000 g1 kg)×0.031 cal/g °C×(730C(33 C))= 80420 cal

Expert Solution
Check Mark
Interpretation Introduction

(d)

Interpretation:

Heat required to rise the temperature of ice from 100 to 285 ° C should be calculated.

Concept Introduction:

Heat required can be calculate using the following formula:

Q = m s ΔT

Where, q is heat required,

m is mass of substance in g,

s is specific heat capacity of the substance and,

ΔTis change in temperature.

Answer to Problem 1.66P

Heat required is 5243.6 cal.

Explanation of Solution

Given Information:

Mass of ice is 71.4 g, change in temperature takes place from -77 ° C to -5 ° C and specific heat capacity of ice is 0.48 cal/g °C

For ice, heat required can be calculated as follows:

Q = m s dT=( 71.4 g)(1.02 cal/g °C)(°C(77 °C))= 5243.6 cal

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Chapter 1 Solutions

Introduction to General, Organic and Biochemistry

Ch. 1.9 - Prob. 1.11PCh. 1 - 1-12 The life expectancy of a citizen in the...Ch. 1 - 1-13 Define the following terms: (a) Matter (b)...Ch. 1 - 1-14 In Table 1-4, you find four metals (iron,...Ch. 1 - 1-15 In a newspaper, you read that Dr. X claimed...Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.16PCh. 1 - 1-17 Write in exponential notation: (a) 0.351 (b)...Ch. 1 - 1-18 Write out in full: (a) 4.03 × l05 (b) 3.2 ×...Ch. 1 - 1-19 Multiply: (a) (2.16 × 105) (3.08 × 1012) (b)...Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.20PCh. 1 - Prob. 1.21PCh. 1 - Prob. 1.22PCh. 1 - Prob. 1.23PCh. 1 - Prob. 1.24PCh. 1 - 1-25 How many significant figures are in the...Ch. 1 - 1-26 How many significant figures are in the...Ch. 1 - 1-27 Round off to two significant figures: (a)...Ch. 1 - 1-28 Multiply these numbers, using the correct...Ch. 1 - 1.29 Divide these numbers, using the correct...Ch. 1 - 1-30 Add these groups of measured numbers using...Ch. 1 - 1-31 In the SI system, the second is the base unit...Ch. 1 - 1-32 How many grams are in the following? (a)1 kg...Ch. 1 - 1-33 Estimate without actually calculating which...Ch. 1 - 1-34 For each of these, tell which figure is...Ch. 1 - 1-35 You are taken for a helicopter ride in Hawaii...Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.36PCh. 1 - Prob. 1.37PCh. 1 - 1-38 Make the following conversions (conversion...Ch. 1 - 1.39 Make the following metric conversions: (a)964...Ch. 1 - There are 2 bottles of cough syrup available on...Ch. 1 - 1-41 A humidifier located at a nursing station...Ch. 1 - 1-42 You drive in Canada where the distances are...Ch. 1 - 1-43 The speed limit in some European cities is 80...Ch. 1 - 1-44 Your car gets 25.00 miles on a gallon of gas....Ch. 1 - 145 Children’s Chewable Tylenol contains 80. mg of...Ch. 1 - 1-46 A patient weighs 186 lbs. She must receive an...Ch. 1 - 1-47 The doctor orders administration of a drug at...Ch. 1 - 1-48 The recommended pediatric dosage of Velosef...Ch. 1 - 1-49 A critical care physician prescribes an IV of...Ch. 1 - 1-50 If an IV is mixed so that each 150 mL...Ch. 1 - 1-51 A nurse practitioner orders isotonic sodium...Ch. 1 - 1-52 An order for a patient reads Give 40. mg of...Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.53PCh. 1 - Prob. 1.54PCh. 1 - 1-55 Does the chemical nature of a substance...Ch. 1 - 1-56 The volume of a rock weighing 1.075 kg is...Ch. 1 - 1-57 The density of manganese is 7.21 g/mL, that...Ch. 1 - 1.58 The density of titanium is 4.54 g/mL. What is...Ch. 1 - 1-59 An injection of 4 mg of Valium has been...Ch. 1 - 1-60 The density of methanol at 20oC is 0.791...Ch. 1 - 1-61 The density of dichloromethane, a liquid...Ch. 1 - 1-62 A sample of 10.00 g of oxygen has a volume of...Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.63PCh. 1 - Prob. 1.64PCh. 1 - 1-65 While you drive your car, your battery is...Ch. 1 - 1-66 How many calories are required to heat the...Ch. 1 - 1-67 If 168 g of an unknown liquid requires 2750...Ch. 1 - 1-68 The specific heat of steam is 0.48 cal/g oC....Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.69PCh. 1 - 1-70 (Chemical Connections IA) The average lethal...Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.71PCh. 1 - Prob. 1.72PCh. 1 - 1-73 (Chemical Connections 1C) Which would make a...Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.74PCh. 1 - 1-75 A brain weighing 1.0 lb occupies a volume of...Ch. 1 - 1-76 If the density of air is 1.25 10-3 g/cc,...Ch. 1 - 1-77 Classify these as kinetic or potential...Ch. 1 - 1-78 The kinetic energy possessed by an object...Ch. 1 - 1-79 A European car advertises an efficiency of 22...Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.80PCh. 1 - Prob. 1.81PCh. 1 - 1-82 When the astronauts walked on the Moon, they...Ch. 1 - 1-83 Which of the following is the largest mass...Ch. 1 - 1-84 Which quantity is bigger in each of the...Ch. 1 - 1-85 In Japan, high-speed “bullet trains” move...Ch. 1 - 1-86 The specific heats of some elements at 25oC...Ch. 1 - 1-87 Water that contains deuterium rather than...Ch. 1 - 1-88 One quart of milk costs 80 cents and one...Ch. 1 - 1-89 Consider butter, density 0.860 g/mL, and...Ch. 1 - 1-90 Which speed is the fastest? (a) 70 mi/h (b)...Ch. 1 - 1-91 In calculating the specific heat of a...Ch. 1 - 1-92 A solar cell generates 500. kJ of energy per...Ch. 1 - 1-93 The specific heat of urea is 1.339 J/g . If...Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.94PCh. 1 - 1-95 You receive an order for 60. mg of meperidine...Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.96PCh. 1 - Prob. 1.97PCh. 1 - 1-98 The antifreeze-coolant compound used in cars...Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.99PCh. 1 - Prob. 1.100PCh. 1 - Prob. 1.101PCh. 1 - Prob. 1.102PCh. 1 - Prob. 1.103PCh. 1 - Prob. 1.104PCh. 1 - Prob. 1.105PCh. 1 - Prob. 1.106PCh. 1 - Prob. 1.107PCh. 1 - Prob. 1.108PCh. 1 - Prob. 1.109PCh. 1 - Prob. 1.110PCh. 1 - 1-111 In the hospital, your doctor orders 100. mg...Ch. 1 - 1-112 A febrile, pediatric patient weighs 42...
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