Comparing Silver and Gold Melting Points: Understanding Coefficient C/G °C

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Silver has a melting point of 961.8°C and a specific heat capacity of 0.056 c/g °C, while gold has a melting point of 1064°C and a specific heat capacity of 0.031 c/g °C. When heating both metals, silver will melt first if the temperature is raised slowly and uniformly, allowing both to remain in equilibrium. However, if heat is applied at a constant rate, gold may melt first due to its lower energy requirement to reach its melting point. The melting sequence ultimately depends on the heating method and the initial conditions of the samples. Understanding these factors is crucial for determining which metal melts first under varying circumstances.
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So melting point of silver followed by coefficient c/g °c;
961.8
.056
Now golds;
1064
.031
Does that mean the silver melts first?
 
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It depends on your meaning of "first."

If you are raising T slowly so that both materials stay in near equilibrium with their surroundings, silver will melt first.

If one is adding heat at a constant rate, then one needs the heat of fusion and the initial temperature and masses to determine which would melt first.
 
No, it doesn't. It may, but it depends on other parameters. The size of the two samples, the rates of heat transfer into and out of the two samples.
And also, on what do you mean by "melts first". It is completely liquid or just "starting to melt".
 
natureboy said:
So melting point of silver followed by coefficient c/g °c;
961.8
.056
Now golds;
1064
.031

The figures with units c/g °c are for the specific heat capacity.

If you started with 1gram of both at room temperature (20c) and heated both samples it you would find it would take a different amount of energy for each one to reach melting point. For example it would take..

For silver... E = 1 * (961-20) * 0.056 = 53 calories
For gold... E = 1 * (1064-20) * 0.031 = 32 calories

So although silver has a lower melting point it takes more heat to get there.

So the answer depends on how the samples are heated as Dr Courtney said. If they are put in an oven together and the temperature increased slowly then Silver melts first. If you heat each one separately using something like a constant power electrical heater then gold melts first because it takes less energy.
 
Thanks exactly what i was asking couldn't word it for the life of me though haha much appreciated
 
So I know that electrons are fundamental, there's no 'material' that makes them up, it's like talking about a colour itself rather than a car or a flower. Now protons and neutrons and quarks and whatever other stuff is there fundamentally, I want someone to kind of teach me these, I have a lot of questions that books might not give the answer in the way I understand. Thanks
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