Heat energy in a mixture to get final temperature

AI Thread Summary
To find the final temperature of a mixture involving coffee, a glass mug, and creme, the conservation of energy principle is applied. The heat lost by the coffee and glass equals the heat gained by the creme, leading to the equation m1C1(70 - T) + m2C2(70 - T) = m3C3(T - 5). The specific heats and masses must be converted to consistent units for accurate calculations. The solution involves calculating the heat energies separately and balancing them to determine the final equilibrium temperature. The discussion highlights a gap in instructional material regarding balancing mixtures.
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Homework Statement



A glass mug has mass 125g empty. It contains 180g of
coffee. Both are at 70 C. I add 15g of creme at 5 C.
Find final temperature. Assume creme has specific
heat of 2900 J/kg.C .

Homework Equations



Q = m C (delta)T in joules or Kcalories

m = mass in kg

C is specific heat where C-coffee 1 kcal/kg.C
C-glass .2 kcal/kg.C
C-creme 2900 J/kg.C

delta T is *change* in temperature


The Attempt at a Solution



Attempt at solution: First I don't see a "change"
in temperature. But I'm somehow suppose to apply
the above formula for Q-heat energy. There are 3
Qs .. 2 at 70 C .. and 1 at 5 C. I am somehow
suppose to weight these separate energies, calculate
a change in temperature. Then show the final equilibrium
temperature.

I can only guess that I can do something like

Q-coffee = mC-coffee x 70 to get an absolute ?? energy

Q-glass = mC-glass x 70

Q-creme = mC-creme x 5

and somehow weight the absolute thermal energies to
get delta-T .. and then T ??
 
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Two hints: First, get your constants into the same units.
Second: Remember that the heat lost by the glass and coffee is the heat gained by the creme.
 
Thanks Barryj .. I got it. I did the heat gained = heat lost Conservation of Energy ( heat )

m1C1(70 - T) + m2C2(70 - T) = m3C3( T - 5 ) with the m3 conversion going back to kcal/kg.C

and I got a very reasonable answer. Amazing! Not one word of how to balance mixtures is anywhere in the
chapter.
 
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