Quantity of heat, phase change of ice to water

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the heat required to raise the temperature of a large piece of ice from 0 °C to a negligible temperature change, ultimately leading to its melting. The initial heat calculation for raising the ice's temperature was found to be insignificant, emphasizing that the ice must first melt before any temperature increase can occur. The total heat required includes both the latent heat for melting the ice and the heat for raising the temperature of the resulting water. The volume increase of the lake corresponds to the volume of the melted ice, calculated to be 1000 m³. The calculations and understanding of the phase change and heat transfer processes were confirmed as correct.
Tafe
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Homework Statement


A 1x106 kg piece of ice is placed into a lake. How much heat is taken from the lake to raise the temperature of the ice from 0 °C to 1x10-20 °C? How much volume does the lake increase by?
Latent heat for water is 334x103 J/kg

Homework Equations


Found in my textbook,
cice = 2100 J/kg*K
Q = m c ΔT
Q = mLf
ρwater = 1.0x103 kg/m3

The Attempt at a Solution


First I found how much heat is required to raise the temperature of the ice from 0 °C to 1x10-20 °C.

Q = mcΔT
Q = (1x106 kg)(2100 J/kg*K)(1x10-20 °C - 0 °C)
Q = 2.1x10-11 J

Then I found how much ice would melt with that amount of heat.

Q = mLf
m = Q / Lf
m = 2.1x10-11 J / 334x103 J/kg
m = 6.287x10-17 kg

Finally, I found the volume of the water, or ice that melted.

ρ = m / V
V = m / ρ
V = 6.287x10-17 kg / 1.0x103 kg/m3
V = 6.287x10-20 m3

My understanding is the adding heat to ice doesn't increase its temperature and instead melts some of it into water that is at the same temperature. So I'm confused about the part asking how much heat is required to raise the temperature of the ice. I don't know if I took the right approach for this problem. Is it because the temperature change is so small?
 
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Hi Tafe,

Welcome to Physics Forums.

Tafe said:
My understanding is the adding heat to ice doesn't increase its temperature and instead melts some of it into water that is at the same temperature. So I'm confused about the part asking how much heat is required to raise the temperature of the ice. I don't know if I took the right approach for this problem. Is it because the temperature change is so small?
Yes, the temperature change they give is negligible and really quite indistinguishable from zero. I think the idea they want to convey is that even to raise the temperature of the ice by that insignificant amount you first have to melt all of it. So you need to convert the ice to liquid water as the first step. Only then can you raise the temperature of the water by the given amount.
 
gneill said:
I think the idea they want to convey is that even to raise the temperature of the ice by that insignificant amount you first have to melt all of it. So you need to convert the ice to liquid water as the first step. Only then can you raise the temperature of the water by the given amount.

It makes so much more sense now! I think I got it.

Heat required in phase change, ice at 0 °C to water at 0 °C:
Q = mLf
Q = (1x106 kg)(334x103 J/kg)
Q = 3.34x1011 J

Heat required in heating water at 0 °C to 1x10-20 °C:
Q = mcΔT
Q = (1x106 kg)(4190 J/kg*K)(1x10-20 °C - 0 °C)
Q = 4.19x10-11 J

The sum of these amounts is the total heat required to raise the temperature of the ice. The volume increase of the lake is the volume of the the entire piece of ice melted.
 
The energy calculations look good.

Shouldn't you give a numerical value for the lake's increase in volume?
 
gneill said:
Shouldn't you give a numerical value for the lake's increase in volume?

The ice is now water, so
ρwater = 1.0x103 kg/m3

ρ = m / V
V = m / ρ
V = (1x106 kg) / (1.0x103 kg/m3)
V = 1000 m3
 
Looks good.
 
Thank you so much gneill. :)
 
You're welcome! :smile:
 
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