What is the linear thermal coefficient of expansion for the container?

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around determining the linear thermal coefficient of expansion for a container filled with mercury, focusing on the effects of temperature change on both the mercury and the container itself.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Mathematical reasoning, Assumption checking

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss the relationship between volumetric and linear expansion coefficients, with some attempting to apply the equation for volumetric expansion while others question the assumptions regarding the behavior of mercury's volume with temperature changes.

Discussion Status

There are various interpretations of the problem, with some participants providing calculations and reasoning while others express confusion about the assumptions made regarding the volume of mercury. Guidance has been offered regarding the setup of the problem and the necessary conversions between volumetric and linear coefficients.

Contextual Notes

Participants note the specific values involved, such as the initial volume of mercury and the temperature change, while also highlighting the discrepancy between the expected expansion of mercury and the volume that spills over from the container.

wildrjetta
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I have tried this question 6 times (getting the same answer more than once) and am still not getting the correct answer. I think I need some help understanding where I'm going wrong.

The question: A container is filled to the brim with 1.35 L of mercury at 20°C. When the temperature of container and mercury is raised to 60°C, 7.4 mL of mercury spill over the brim of the container. Determine the linear expansion coefficient of the container.

I have tried using the equation, (delta V/Vo) = 3 (alpha) (delta T), knowing that Beta=3(alpha) for the relationship between linear and volumetric expansion coefficients. I also know that the volume of mercury in the container doesn't decrease that much (1.35L --> 1.3426L) and that the temperature change is 40K (since degrees celsius and kelvin are the same scale). I am very frustrated with this problem and hope someone can help me see my error. :frown:

Thanks.
 
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I'm not familiar with this but I want to know, why does the volume of mercury decrease with an increase in tempeture?
 
As far as I know, it doesn't. The volumetric thermal expansion coefficient for mercury at room temperature is about 1.8 * 10^(-4) /K. That makes the mercury in the container increase in volume by about 10 ml.
 
thank you for pointing that out, I don't know what I was thinking in my reasoning that the volume would decrease. Perhaps I had just been used to doing something similar in previous questions I had been working on prior to trying this one. Nonetheless, wouldn't I set the problem up with delta V = (7.4e-3L)/(V0=1.35L)(delta T=40k)? Thus I get an answer that needs to be divided by 3 to convert from the volumetric coefficient to the linear coefficient. My answer is 4.567...e-5 K^-1. I tried this as one of my answers and it was wrong. Am I making an incorrect assumption still? What am I missing in my logic here?
THank you to the two previous threads and any that may be able to help me out!
 
I'm doing this very roughly. I previously calculated that the mercury will expand by about 10 mL. But only 7.4 mL spills out. This means that the vessel must increase its volume by the difference = 2.6 mL (This is the logical step you are missing). Dividing this by the initial volume = 1350 mL, the fraction is about 0.2% or 0.002. Dividing this by 40 and then by 3 should give you the linear thermal coefficient of expansion of the material of the container. I get rougly 0.000016 /K.

Do this correctly using a calculator. You should get a number that isn't terribly far from what I got.
 

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