Does Temperature Affect Mass in Chemistry Experiments?

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SUMMARY

The discussion centers on the impact of temperature on the mass of substances in chemistry experiments, specifically regarding the weighing of an evaporating dish containing CuSO4·5H2O. It is established that temperature does not significantly affect mass in a closed system, although slight increases in mass due to energy changes can occur, as described by Einstein's equation E=mc2. Weighing the dish while still warm is recommended to prevent moisture re-absorption, which can lead to inaccuracies in mass calculations. The conversation also highlights the importance of using appropriate balances and maintaining good lab practices.

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  • Familiarity with weighing techniques and the use of balances in laboratory settings.
  • Knowledge of Einstein's mass-energy equivalence principle (E=mc2).
  • Awareness of hygroscopic materials and their behavior in different environmental conditions.
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  • Research the principles of weighing techniques in analytical chemistry.
  • Learn about the properties and behavior of hygroscopic substances like CuSO4·5H2O.
  • Explore the implications of E=mc2 in practical laboratory settings.
  • Investigate the effects of temperature on buoyancy and its relevance in mass measurements.
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TheShapeOfTime
We were told in chemistry class to weigh an evaporating dish after it cooled. Does it's temperature affect it's mass?
 
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In general, the temperature does not affect the mass of a closed system.

In your class, you are probably allowing something to cool, so that there is no more evaporation happening. That, or they don't want you to burn your fingers touching a hot object. What's in the dish, anyway ?
 
There was CuSO_4 \cdot 5H_2O in the evaporting dish. We were evaporating the water out of this hydrate to get an anhydrous compound. The goal was to find the ratio of water molecules to copper sulfate molecules. One of the questioins she asked us was why we should take the mass of the evaporating dish after it cools.
 
I can only think this is a safety measure. Also, depending on what kind of balance you are using, weighing something that's hot may give a faulty reading or might even damage the balance. Do you use a metal balace which uses moments or a digical balance which uses springs ? And I'll repeat :Temperature does not affect mass directly.

In your particular example, it would be more accurate if you weigh the dish while still little hot. When the copper sulfate cools, being slightly hygroscopic, it will start to re-absorb moisture from the atmosphere. If you wait too long for it to cool, it may have re-absorbed a considerable amount of moisture that your calculation will yield an underestimate.
 
TheShapeOfTime said:
We were told in chemistry class to weigh an evaporating dish after it cooled. Does it's temperature affect it's mass?

Yes, temperature afects mass, but not enough so that you'd notice in a laboratory undergoing chemical reactions with a balance.

You might be able to measure the differences if you were doing nuclear reactions rather than chemical ones, but it's hard to contain the resulting plasma in a typical set of laboratory beakers :-).
 
Gokul43201 said:
I can only think this is a safety measure. Also, depending on what kind of balance you are using, weighing something that's hot may give a faulty reading or might even damage the balance. Do you use a metal balace which uses moments or a digical balance which uses springs ? And I'll repeat :Temperature does not affect mass directly.

In your particular example, it would be more accurate if you weigh the dish while still little hot. When the copper sulfate cools, being slightly hygroscopic, it will start to re-absorb moisture from the atmosphere. If you wait too long for it to cool, it may have re-absorbed a considerable amount of moisture that your calculation will yield an underestimate.

The substance was left in a desiccator, which would probably keep it from re-absorbing moisture (another question we were asked :smile:). Maybe it's best to answer the question saying the temperature could affect the mass? I can't see any other possible answer... any ideas?
 
The warm dish can create convection (airflow), which affects the scale's reading.
 
TheShapeOfTime said:
The substance was left in a desiccator, which would probably keep it from re-absorbing moisture (another question we were asked :smile:). Maybe it's best to answer the question saying the temperature could affect the mass? I can't see any other possible answer... any ideas?

The only direct influence on mass will be too small to measure on any lab scales.

The only way you can affect the mass in your experiment is by adding or removing something to the test substance. If you can find a way for the high temperature to be responsible for adding or removing material, then only would the answer be 'yes'.

If I was conducting a high school chemistry lab with the question you've got, I'd give a full grade to anyone that said 'no', or if someone saying 'yes' can explain why.
 
I can now answer this question, thanks!
 
  • #10
I think that temperaturte doesn't affect mass, but it do affect wieght of the body.
because if we put a piece of iron above a scale, we can consider that its weigh represent the pressure excerted form it onto the scale, and when the tempreture gets raised, the movemnt of molecules of the lowest part of the iron mass increases, this would raise the pressure excerted from the iron onto the scale, and would make the scale raise the value of the weight of the body.
here I think that it's the same as "increasing the temperature of gaz increses its pressure", its also increasing the temperature will increase the weight of any mass because of the incresed number of molecules of the body which hit the scale and cause it to raise the value of the weight of the body.
but i don't think that it raises the mass...
 
  • #11
Ayham Sallah said:
I think that temperaturte doesn't affect mass, but it do affect wieght of the body.
because if we put a piece of iron above a scale, we can consider that its weigh represent the pressure excerted form it onto the scale, and when the tempreture gets raised, the movemnt of molecules of the lowest part of the iron mass increases, this would raise the pressure excerted from the iron onto the scale, and would make the scale raise the value of the weight of the body.
here I think that it's the same as "increasing the temperature of gaz increses its pressure", its also increasing the temperature will increase the weight of any mass because of the incresed number of molecules of the body which hit the scale and cause it to raise the value of the weight of the body.
but i don't think that it raises the mass...
As Pervect has explained an increase in temperature results in an increase in mass though a balance scale would not be sensitive enough to show the slight increase.
By increasing the temperature you are adding energy to your piece of iron so it would be slightly more massive than when it was cold.
Much the same way as a charged battery is slightly more massive than an uncharged one.
This amount is teeny weeny and too small to measure with a normall scale.
 
  • #12
you could calculate it , using Q=mct
c= specific heat
m= mass
t= change in temperature
and then use this increase in temperature and divide it by c^2 (speed of light) and get your mass increase, which would be very small.
 
  • #13
E=mc^2

As temperature rises, the kinetic energy of the molecules rises, according to the Einstein's equation, their masses must rise.
 
  • #14
quantum123 said:
E=mc^2

As temperature rises, the kinetic energy of the molecules rises, according to the Einstein's equation, their masses must rise.

I guess this is the kinetic energy relative to the speed of light as well as the 'base energy' of the object before it was heated. In that case, for normal laboratory tests, the increased mass would be incredibly tiny. You'd have to heat the body high enough to emit gamma rays to notice any change.

I think it might be possible to utilize this principle into a 'directed energy' space propulsion system. Or simply accelerate charged particles at very close to light speed and slow them magnetically at some point in the accelerator. Exhaust would be a high energy beam consisting of X-rays and/or gamma rays.
 
  • #15
what about subzero, the complete absence of heat?
 
  • #16
The problem when weighting a hot dish is not that it's mass is changing but that:
a) The mass of the hot air in the hot dish is lower than that of the cold air in the cold dish.
b) The density of the hot dish is lower than that of the cold dish due to thermal expansion whence the hot dish has a higher buoyancy in the surrounding air.
 
  • #17
if your aim is to observe the gravity of electrons at different temperatures, you will need a very controlled environment, I am not sure that a petry dish would be considered in such an experiment as you would break your petry dish when it reaches it's tolerance because you either would need a way to measure the gravity created by a large explosion or a way to succeed in total refrigeration, a process that, if successful, would create dark matter, destroying your entire lab by completely halting every electron and altering every molecule affected into a unified state of zero mass, so probably better off trying to measure the gravity of an atom bomb as it is more predictable and possible than halting electrons
 
  • #18
Weighing the empty dish before and after the experiment is just good lab practice. If the readings are different then the dish was not clean/dry before the experiment or something else got screwed up.

The direct effects of temperature on the weight are fairly small and have been listed above.
 
  • #19
  • #20
The reason for waiting for the dish to cool is to reduce air currents around the plate and balance that could affect the result.
 

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