How Fast Does Temperature Rise in an Unventilated Silicon Circuit?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on calculating the temperature rise in an unventilated silicon circuit when electricity flows through it, resulting in a power increase of 7.4 mW. Participants clarify the use of the equation Q=mcΔT to determine the rate of temperature change (ΔT/Δt) and emphasize the importance of understanding how to express power in terms of energy transfer over time. The correct approach involves using the power value directly rather than assuming a time duration of one second. The final calculation yields a temperature rise of approximately 0.46 K/s, highlighting the necessity of proper unit conversions and algebraic manipulation in physics problems. Understanding these concepts is crucial for solving similar thermal dynamics questions effectively.
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Homework Statement



A silicon electric circuit is 23 mg, when electricity flows through the circuit rising the energy by 7.4 mW but this circuit wasn't design for heat ventilation. Find the rate of how much the temperature is rising per second ( ΔT/Δt ) The specific heat of silicon is 705 J/kg.K[/B]

Homework Equations


Q=mcΔT

The Attempt at a Solution



I know that when the electricity flows through the circuit, it will rise the temperature and we can figure the change in temperature by find both initial and final temperature but what about time? how this factor get in the calculation?
 
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Can you express watts in terms of other SI units?
 
Ask not for whom the bell tolls. Ask instead "the bell's heat capacity."
 
DrClaude said:
Can you express watts in terms of other SI units?

Joules per second ? it is just a rate of how much energy was transfer in 1 second, I can't plug this in Q :/
 
Pao44445 said:
Joules per second ? it is just a rate of how much energy was transfer in 1 second, I can't plug this in Q :/
No, but you can calculate Q/Δt :smile:
 
DrClaude said:
No, but you can calculate Q/Δt :smile:
hmm I don't know if I am correct or not

from Q=mcΔT and ΔT/Δt
(Q/mc) / Δt = Q / (mc)Δt
7.4x10-3 J / (23x10-6kg)x(705 J/kg.K)x 1 s
= 0.46 K/s
 
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Be careful with the mass there. Since you are given the heat capacity per gram, you can use g throughout and not convert to kg.

Also, I would find it more appropriate to take Q/Δt as a whole to be 7.4 mW instead of "assuming" 1 second.
 
DrClaude said:
Be careful with the mass there. Since you are given the heat capacity per gram, you can use g throughout and not convert to kg.

Also, I would find it more appropriate to take Q/Δt as a whole to be 7.4 mW instead of "assuming" 1 second.

edited
Then Q / (mc)Δt = W/mc
(7.4x10-3 W ) / (23x10-6kg)(705 J/kg.K)
= 0.46 K/s

but how this equation solve the problem?
 
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Pao44445 said:
Then Q / (mc)Δt = Wmc
(7.4x10-3 W )(23x10-6kg)(705 J/kg.K)
= 1.2x10-4 W.J/K

but how this equation solve the problem?
You've missed a division in there.
 
  • #10
DrClaude said:
You've missed a division in there.
oops, sorry. I've edited them and got the same answer 0.45-0.46 K/s
I think this is another pure mathematic problem :( really hate this kind of problem.
 
  • #11
I wouldn't say that this is "pure mathematics." Actually, you need physical insight to figure out that you have information about Q/Δt. Once you figure that out, you have
$$
\frac{Q}{\Delta t} = m c \frac{\Delta T}{\Delta t}
$$
and you simply need to rearrange the equation to isolate ##{\Delta T}/{\Delta t}##, which is what you are asked for. Such simple algebra appears everywhere in physics, so you better get used to it (and good at it) :smile:
 
  • #12
Never see that equation before :/

I don't know how come Q=mcΔT so I don't actually understand how to use it
 
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