Thermal Conductivity and latent heat

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on calculating the temperature difference needed for heat transfer through a copper kettle to raise the temperature of water. The calculated steady temperature difference between the inner and outer surfaces of the kettle's base is approximately 0.18 degrees Celsius. For the second part, the user attempts to determine the specific latent heat of vaporization of water after boiling for 120 seconds, initially calculating it incorrectly. After clarifying the approach, the final value for the latent heat of vaporization is found to be approximately 2.4 x 10^6 J/kg. The conversation emphasizes the importance of correct unit usage and methodical calculations in physics problems.
risingabove
Messages
20
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement



If a copper kettle has a base of thickness 2.0mm and an area 3.0 x 10-2 m2 estimate the steady difference in temperature between the inner and outer surface of the base which
must be maintained to enable enough heat too pass through so that the temperature of 1 kg of water
rises of 0.25 K/s assume that there are no heat losses.

(ii) After reaching the temperature of 373K the water is allowed to boil under the same conditions for 120 seconds and the mass of water remaining in the kettle is 0.948kg.
Deduce a value for the specific latent heat of vaporization of water ( neglecting condensation of the steam in the kettle)

Homework Equations



Thermal conductivity of copper 3.8 x 102 W/m/C
Specific Heat Capacity of water 4.0 x 103 J/kg/K

Equations used

dQ/dt = kA(dΘ/dx)

where dQ/dt = rate of flow of heat
K = Thermal Conductivity
A = Area
dΘ = Change in Temperature
dx = Thickness
whereby dΘ/dx = Temperature gradient

Q = mCT

Where Q = Heat require
m = Mass of substance
C = Specific heat capacity
T = Temperature

Q= mL

Where Q = Heat Require
m = Mass
L = Latent Heat

The Attempt at a Solution



Firstly i used the specific heat capacity equation to find the rate of flow of heat

Q = 1 (4.2 x 103 J/kg/K ) 0.25 K/s
= 1050 J/s

Using the above answer i substitute it into the equation for thermal conductivity

1050 = 3.8 x 102 W/m/C (3.0 x 10-2 m2 )(dΘ/0.002m)
by simple calculations my answer = 0.18 degrees

Part (ii)

I am abit lost as to where to go from here... but I am thinking i will have to multiply 120 seconds by 0.25K/s which = 30 K/s

and used the 30K/s in the specific heat capacity equation ...( but I am thinking that doesn't make any sense)

By using the 373k and substituting it into the heat capacity equation

Q = 1(4.2 x 103 J/kg/K)373
= 1566600J

and using the answer above in the Latent heat of vaporization equation

1566600 = 0.948L
L = 1.6 x 106 J/kg/K

This seems wrong tho...

By the way is my answer correct for Part (i) ??
 
Last edited:
Physics news on Phys.org
risingabove said:
I am abit lost as to where to go from here... but I am thinking i will have to multiply 120 seconds by 0.25K/s which = 30 K/s
The temperature will be constant, so it's abit strange to start with something in K/s!

In part (i), you figured out how much power is furnished to the kettle. Start from there.

risingabove said:
By the way is my answer correct for Part (i) ??
I didn't check all the calculations, but the approach seemed right.
 
:biggrin: YAYYYYY i got!...geezeeee that was simple enough...

ok this is what i did ...please let me kno if I am correct...although i think i am

soo you said to start from the power i got in part (i) which was 1050 J/s

Therefore for rate of flow of heat( which is power) dQ/dt = 1050watts

since the time was given in the problem, 120seconds, i substituted it in for dt

solving for dQ i got 12600

then by subtracting the initial mass from the final, i got the mass of water that was vaporized
= 0.052

these values was then substituted into the formula for latent heat of vaporization

giving me 2.4 x 106
 
risingabove said:
these values was then substituted into the formula for latent heat of vaporization

giving me 2.4 x 106
Great, but don't forget the units :-p
 
Thread 'Voltmeter readings for this circuit with switches'
TL;DR Summary: I would like to know the voltmeter readings on the two resistors separately in the picture in the following cases , When one of the keys is closed When both of them are opened (Knowing that the battery has negligible internal resistance) My thoughts for the first case , one of them must be 12 volt while the other is 0 The second case we'll I think both voltmeter readings should be 12 volt since they are both parallel to the battery and they involve the key within what the...
Thread 'Correct statement about a reservoir with an outlet pipe'
The answer to this question is statements (ii) and (iv) are correct. (i) This is FALSE because the speed of water in the tap is greater than speed at the water surface (ii) I don't even understand this statement. What does the "seal" part have to do with water flowing out? Won't the water still flow out through the tap until the tank is empty whether the reservoir is sealed or not? (iii) In my opinion, this statement would be correct. Increasing the gravitational potential energy of the...
Back
Top