Determine the temperature of the blood/ Heat problem

AI Thread Summary
Blood transports excess energy from the body's interior to the surface, where it dissipates during exercise. A user initially miscalculated the heat transfer by using an incorrect value for energy released, confusing the final temperature of the blood. After clarification, it was established that the blood releases 2050 J of energy, leading to a corrected calculation of the cooled blood's temperature. The specific heat capacity of water, 4186 J/kg°C, was confirmed as essential for these calculations. Ultimately, the final temperature of the cooled blood was determined to be approximately 36.388°C.
iceT
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Blood can carry excess energy from the interior to the surface of the body, where the energy is dispersed in a number of ways. While a person is exercising, 0.8 kg of blood flows to the surface of the body and releases 2050 J of energy. The blood arriving at the surface has the temperature of the body interior, 37.0°C. Assuming that blood has the same specific heat capacity as water, determine the temperature of the blood that leaves the surface and returns to the interior

ok..I know that DELTA T = Q/cm
Q= heat
since i don't have the heat..i had to find it...so i did this
Q=( CM ) ( DELTA T ) = ( 4186 ) ( .8 ) ( 37.0 °C - 15.0 °C )
= 73673.6 J

now I got the heat...so i can apply this formula to find the temperature..
DELTA T = Q/cm = 73673.6 / ( 4186 ) ( .8 ) = 22 °C
but still..i keep getting it wrong...:mad: :confused: ..does anyone knows what I am doing wrong ??..
 
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iceT said:
ok..I know that DELTA T = Q/cm
Q= heat
since i don't have the heat..i had to find it...so i did this
Q=( CM ) ( DELTA T ) = ( 4186 ) ( .8 ) ( 37.0 °C - 15.0 °C )
= 73673.6 J
What do you mean you don't have the heat? The problem stated: "0.8 kg of blood flows to the surface of the body and releases 2050 J of energy."

Where did you get the 15.0 °C ? (The final temperature of the blood is what you are trying to find.)
 
ok...so it should be
2050 / ( 4186 ) ( .8 ) = 0.612
BUT IT STILL WRONG...

ok..is it 37.612 ?
 
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What did you get for the temperature of the cooled blood?
 
iceT said:
ok..is it 37.612 ?
You're getting closer... remember that heat is being removed from the blood.
 
Doc Al said:
You're getting closer... remember that heat is being removed from the blood.

36.388:biggrin:
 
thanx a lot Dr Al :smile: :approve:
 
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I have a similar problem to this but I don't understand it. Where did you guys get the 4186?


(the problem I have is...Blood can carry excess energy from the interior to the surface of the body, where the energy is dispersed in a number of ways. While a person is exercising, 0.6 kg of blood flows to the surface of the body and releases 2000 J of energy. The blood arriving at the surface has the temperature of the body interior, 37.0°C. Assuming that blood has the same specific heat capacity as water, determine the temperature of the blood that leaves the surface and returns to the interior... so basically same thing, just different numbers)
 
ElikuAberts said:
Where did you guys get the 4186?
It's the specific heat capacity of water, it takes 4186J of energy to raise the temperature of 1kg of water through 1 Kelvin (or 1deg C).
You have to know/look this up, it's an experimental value.
 
  • #10
Thank you, mgb_phys! I get it now! :smile:
 
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