Find Meters to Fill Copper Cylinder with 8.60lbs of Covelite

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the length of 34-gauge copper wire that can be produced from 8.60 pounds of covelite, which is 60% copper. Participants clarify the relevance of the covelite's copper content and the necessary conversions from pounds to grams. They discuss the volume of a cylinder, using the formula V = πr²h, and the importance of converting the wire's diameter from inches to centimeters. After calculating the volume and height, the final answers for the length of wire produced are debated, with some expressing frustration over errors in their calculations. The conversation emphasizes the step-by-step process required to solve the problem accurately.
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Homework Statement



copper can be drawn into wires. how many meters of 34-gauge wire (diameter 6.304 x 10 -3 in) can be produced in copper from 8.60 pounds of covelite, an ore that is 60% copper by mass. (hint: treat the volume as a cylinder, V of cylinder= pie r squared, density of copper = 8.95 g/cm3

Homework Equations



V of cylinder = pie r (squared)

The Attempt at a Solution



I don't know where to start, is the 60% mass of the covelite ther to confuse me? or is it relevant?
 
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if there are 8.60 lbs of covelite and 60% of this is copper, how many lbs if copper is in it?

Now that you have the mass, what is the volume, given the density and the found mass? (Note that your mass should be in grams)

also I think your equation should be V= πr2h, as πr2 alone gives units of m2 which is used for area. (h=height of the cylinder)
 


ok..I'm following you up until then.. does that mean that for the 34-gauge wire i use the 6.304 x10^-3 and that's the diameter? so for the (vol = pie r^2) i would use (6.304x10^-3 / 2) for the radius?

so I used the V = m/d formula and got 255.66...what do i do with that now?

i'm thinking myself to death here. should have never take 5 years off school to go to the military.
 


ok, πr2 alone gives units of m2 ...does that mean that i just take the square root of my m2? because I'm looking for length in meters?
 


geoti8 said:
ok..I'm following you up until then.. does that mean that for the 34-gauge wire i use the 6.304 x10^-3 and that's the diameter? so for the (vol = pie r^2) i would use (6.304x10^-3 / 2) for the radius?

so I used the V = m/d formula and got 255.66...what do i do with that now?

i'm thinking myself to death here. should have never take 5 years off school to go to the military.

worry not! We will get through here.

Right now, so you have V=255.66 cm3 (assuming you converted your lbs to grams)

so now you know that V=πr2h. (r is half your diameter, so convert that to cm!)

so put πr2h=255.66 and solve for h
 


ok so i plug my vol, and radius into the equation:

255.66 = pi (6.304x10^-3 /2)^2 x h ... and get...

255.66h = (3.14)(.003152)^2 ...

h = .000031196/255.66 ...

1.22 x 10^-7 is my m2? (was that in cm? or m?) do i need to get the square root...

3.493 x 10^-4 is that in cm or meters ??
 


geoti8 said:
ok so i plug my vol, and radius into the equation:

255.66 = pi (6.304x10^-3 /2)^2 x h ... and get...

255.66h = (3.14)(.003152)^2 ...

h = .000031196/255.66 ...

1.22 x 10^-7 is my m2? (was that in cm? or m?) do i need to get the square root...

3.493 x 10^-4 is that in cm or meters ??

convert the 6.304x10^-3 inches into cm, then plug it into the equation
 


ok so apparently the answer was 1.88 x 10^12 or ^14

and i got

1.875 x 10^14 or ^12

as soon as i saw i got it incorrect i stopped caring, FML.
 


thanks for your help though, you must be a teacher, professor..or something along those lines to give me step by step help like that
 
  • #10


geoti8 said:
ok so apparently the answer was 1.88 x 10^12 or ^14

and i got

1.875 x 10^14 or ^12

as soon as i saw i got it incorrect i stopped caring, fml.

1.875 ≈ 1.88 :confused: how'd you get it wrong?


(also, I am a student like you :smile: )
 
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