How Long Does It Take to Heat Water in a Kettle with a Water Equivalent of 150g?

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SUMMARY

The discussion focuses on calculating the time required to heat water in a kettle with a resistance of 105 ohms and an applied voltage of 240V. The first calculation indicates that it takes approximately 11 minutes and 56 seconds to raise the temperature of 150g of water from 15°C to 90°C, confirming the textbook's answer. For a subsequent liter of water heated immediately after, the initial calculation yielded 10 minutes and 08 seconds, while the textbook states 10 minutes and 58 seconds. The discrepancy arises from assumptions regarding the effective mass of the system and the kettle's water equivalent.

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  • Understanding of electrical resistance and Ohm's Law
  • Knowledge of thermal energy calculations (Q = mcΔT)
  • Familiarity with efficiency calculations in heating systems
  • Basic principles of heat transfer and thermodynamics
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This discussion is beneficial for electrical engineering students, physics enthusiasts, and anyone interested in the practical applications of thermodynamics and electrical heating systems.

ande
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1. The element of a heater kettle has a constant resistance of 105 ohms and applied voltage of 240V.

1. Calculate the time taken to raise the temperature of water from 15 degrees Celsius to 90 assuming that. 80% of the power input to the kettle is usefully employed. I worked this out and got 11 min 56sec which is the same answer that appears on the textbook

2. If the water equivalent of the kettle is 150g, find how long it will take to raise a second litre of. Water through the same temp range immediately after the first time. I get 10min 08sec but the textbook says 10min 58sec. Please shed some light
2. Q= mcdt P= V^2/R and efficiency = Po/Pi3. I attempted the question by subtracting the equivalent mass from the mass of water thus giving a net mass of 0.85 but the answer I got doesn't correspond with the textbook. Assume 1L = 1kg
 
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ande said:
a second litre
This is a clue.
ande said:
giving a net mass of 0.85
Think about the assumption you made to get this number, then try it again.
 
Bystander said:
This is a clue.

Think about the assumption you made to get this number, then try it again.
Correct me of I'm wrong but if the second litre is heated immediately after the first, 150g of the system is theoretically at 90 degrees correct? You'll have to pardon my reasoning, I'm a first year electrical engineering student.
 
Figure the capacity of the kettle is at least two liters. If you can heat one liter plus the kettle in time x, at whatever efficiency, if the efficiency is constant, you can heat two liters plus the kettle in what time? What is the difference between the two times?
 

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