Calculating Temperature Change with Ice Cube in Coffee

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on calculating the temperature change when an ice cube is placed in coffee. The initial equation presented is correct but lacks the term for the heat required to melt the ice. It is clarified that the ice remains at 0°C until fully melted, and the heat lost by the coffee first melts the ice before raising the temperature of the resulting water. The final temperature depends on whether there is enough heat to not only melt the ice but also to increase the temperature of the water above 0°C. If the ice were initially at -10°C, additional calculations would be necessary to account for heating the ice to 0°C before melting.
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I have a question involving putting an ice cube in a thermos of coffee. I used c_{ice}m_{ice}(T_f-T_i) + c_{coffee}m_{coffee}(T_f-T_i)=0. Is this right? If so wouldn't the temperatures of the ice remain constant until it is all gone?It says that the ice is at 0'C.
 
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The approach is correct, but there is a term that is missing in your equation: the heat needed to completely melt the ice cube.
 
How do I find this..If say the ice was at -10'C then i could do this by using Tf=0..But since it is already at its melting point, I am kinda confused
 
waiitt...Q=Lm?
 
Heat Lost = Heat Gained, the heat lost by the coffee melts the ice first (mL) and then raises it to a higher temperature (mcdeltaT)
 
So my equation is going to become L_Fm + c_{ice}m_{ice}(T_f-T_i) + c_{coffee}m_{coffee}(T_f-T_i)=0? and then will c_{ice}m_{ice}(T_f-T_i) become zero since the ice isn't going to change Temp until it has changed phases
 
It depends on the numbers. If the final temperature is above 0 degrees, then there was enough heat to both melt the ice and raise the temperature of the new water above 0 degrees

Something else to point out is that the problem wouldn't be simpler if the ice started out at -10 degrees. You would need to determine (in this order) the heat used to raise the temperature to 0, the heat to melt the ice, and the heat to raise the water temperature above 0
 
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