Solving Heat Transfer of Ice Homework: Initial Copper Temp

AI Thread Summary
The homework problem involves determining the initial temperature of a 6.00-kg piece of copper placed in an insulated container with 2.00 kg of ice at -20.0°C, reaching thermal equilibrium with 1.2 kg of ice and 0.80 kg of water. The calculations for heat transfer include the specific heat of copper and the heat required to raise the ice temperature and melt some of it. Errors in arithmetic were identified, particularly in calculating the heat required to raise the ice to 0°C and the latent heat of fusion. The correct initial temperature of the copper was found to be 150°C, indicating that the initial calculations were flawed. Accurate arithmetic and correct values for latent heat are crucial for solving heat transfer problems effectively.
Bassa
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Homework Statement


A 6.00-kg piece of solid copper metal at an initial temperature T is placed with 2.00 kg of ice that is initially at -20.0C. The ice is in an insulated container of negligible mass and no heat is exchanged with the surroundings. After thermal equilibrium is reached, there is 1.2 kg of ice and 0.80 kg of liquid water. What was the initial temperature od the piece of copper?[/B]

Homework Equations


Q=mcΔT
Q=mL (L in this case is the heat of fusion)
ΣQ=0[/B]

The Attempt at a Solution


Qcopper= 6(390)(Tf-T)
Qice=2(2100)(0-(-20))=8400J (heat required to raise the temperature of the ice to 0C)
Qwater=.8(334x10^3)=26400J (heat required to melt .8 kg of ice)

applying ΣQ=0:
6(390)(Tf-T) + 8400+26400=0

Tf= would have to be 0c because we still have some ice left.

solve for T:
T
=118.974C
The correct answer is 150C
what did I do wrong?[/B]
 
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You've made some arithmetic errors.

Chet
 
Chestermiller said:
You've made some arithmetic errors.

Chet
Thanks! Is the method correct, though?
 
Bassa said:
Thanks! Is the method correct, though?
Yes
 
Bassa said:

Homework Statement


A 6.00-kg piece of solid copper metal at an initial temperature T is placed with 2.00 kg of ice that is initially at -20.0C. The ice is in an insulated container of negligible mass and no heat is exchanged with the surroundings. After thermal equilibrium is reached, there is 1.2 kg of ice and 0.80 kg of liquid water. What was the initial temperature od the piece of copper?[/B]

Homework Equations


Q=mcΔT
Q=mL (L in this case is the heat of fusion)
ΣQ=0[/B]

The Attempt at a Solution


Qcopper= 6(390)(Tf-T)
Qice=2(2100)(0-(-20))=8400J (heat required to raise the temperature of the ice to 0C)
Qwater=.8(334x10^3)=26400J (heat required to melt .8 kg of ice)

applying ΣQ=0:
6(390)(Tf-T) + 8400+26400=0

Tf= would have to be 0c because we still have some ice left.

solve for T:
T
=118.974C
The correct answer is 150C
what did I do wrong?[/B]

You should check your arithmetic here throughout. For example, when I calculate 2 * 2100 * 20, I don't get 8400.
 
Thank you very much for your help!
 
Your Latent heat of fusion of ice is incorrect. It should be 3.33 x 10^5 for it to have a result of 150 centigrade.
 
Fizixxs said:
Your Latent heat of fusion of ice is incorrect. It should be 3.33 x 10^5 for it to have a result of 150 centigrade.
Hello, @Fizixxs .

:welcome:

You are answering a thread which is more than 8 years old.
 
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