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Quantity of Heat

The document discusses the concepts of heat, heat capacity, and specific heat capacity, providing formulas and examples for calculations. It also covers latent heat of fusion and vaporization, along with factors affecting melting points and evaporation. Additionally, it compares boiling and evaporation, highlighting their applications in cooling processes.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
47 views8 pages

Quantity of Heat

The document discusses the concepts of heat, heat capacity, and specific heat capacity, providing formulas and examples for calculations. It also covers latent heat of fusion and vaporization, along with factors affecting melting points and evaporation. Additionally, it compares boiling and evaporation, highlighting their applications in cooling processes.

Uploaded by

bchifundo0
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Quantity of Heat

- Heat is a form of energy that flows from one body to another due

to temperature differences between them.

Heat capacity

Heat capacity is defined as the quantity of heat required to raise

the temperature of a given mass of a substance by one degree

Celsius or one Kelvin. It is denoted by C.

Heat capacity, C = heat absorbed, Q / temperature change θ.

The units of heat capacity are J / °C or J / K.

Specific heat capacity

S.H.C of a substance is the quantity of heat required to raise the

temperature of 1 kg of a substance by 1 °C or 1 K. It is denoted

by 'c', hence,

c = Q / m θ where Q – quantity of heat, m – mass and θ – change

in temperature. The units for 'c' are J kg-1 K-1. Also Q = m c θ.

Example 1

1. A block of metal of mass 1.5 kg which is suitably insulated is

heated from 30 °C to 50 °C in 8 minutes and 20 seconds by an

electric heater coil rated 54 watts. Find;


a) The quantity of heat supplied by the heater

b) The heat capacity of the block

c) Its specific heat capacity

Solution

a) Quantity of heat = power × time = P t

= 54 × 500 = 27,000 J

b) Heat capacity, C = Q / θ = 27,000 / (50 – 30) = 1,350 J K-1

c) Specific heat capacity, c = C / m = 1,350 / 1.5 = 900 J Kg-1 K-1

Example 2

If 300 g of paraffin is heated with an immersion heater rated 40 W,

what is the temperature after 3 minutes if the initial temperature

was 20 °C? (S.H.C for paraffin = 2,200 J Kg-1 K-1).

Solution

Energy = P t = m c θ = Q = quantity of heat.

P t = 40 ×180 = 7,200 J

m = 0.30 kg c = 2,200, θ = ..?

Q = m c θ, θ = Q / m c = 7,200 / (0.3 × 2,200) = 10.9 °C

Final temperature = 20°C + 10.9°C = 30.9°C


Example 3

A piece of copper of mass 60 g and specific heat capacity 390 J Kg-

1
K-1 cools from 90 °C to 40 °C. Find the quantity of heat given out.

Solution

Q = m c θ, = 60 × 10-3 × 390 × 50 = 1,170 J.

Determination of specific heat capacity

- A calorimeter is used to determine the specific heat capacity of a

substance.

- This uses the principle of heat gained by a substance is equal to

the heat lost by another substance in contact with each other until

equilibrium is achieved.

- Heat losses in calorimeter are controlled such that no losses

occur or they are very minimal.


Example 4

1. A 50 W heating coil is immersed in a liquid contained in an

insulated flask of negligible heat capacity. If the mass of the liquid

is 10 g and its temperature increases by 10 °C in 2 minutes, find

the specific heat capacity of the liquid.

Solution

Heat delivered (P t) = 50 × 2 × 60 = 2,400 J

Heat gained = 0.1 × c × 10 J

Therefore 'c' = 2,400 / 0.1 × 10 = 2,400 J Kg-1 K-1

Example 5

A metal cylinder mass 0.5 kg is heated electrically. If the voltmeter


reads 15V, the ammeter 3A and the temperatures of the block rises

from 20 °C to 85 °C in ten minutes. Calculate the specific heat

capacity of the metal cylinder.

Solution

Heat gained = heat lost, V I t = m c θ

15 × 3 × 10 × 60 = 0.5 × c × 65

c = (15 × 3 × 600)/ 0.5 × 65 = 831 J Kg-1 K-1

Fusion and latent heat of fusion

- Fusion is the change of state from solid to liquid. Change of state

from liquid to solid is called solidification. Latent heat of fusion is

the heat energy absorbed or given out during fusion.

- Specific latent heat of fusion of a substance is the quantity of

heat energy required to change completely 1 kg of a substance at

its melting point into liquid without change in temperature.

- It is represented by the symbol (L), we use the following formula,

Q = m Lf

- Different substances have different latent heat of fusion.


Factors affecting the melting point

1. Pressure

2. Dissolved substances

- Specific latent heat of vaporization is the quantity of heat

required to change completely 1 kg of a liquid at its normal boiling

point to vapour without changing its temperature. Hence

Q=mLv

The SI unit for specific latent heat of vaporization is J / Kg.

Example 6

An immersion heater rated 600 W is placed in water. After the

water starts to boil, the heater is left on for 6 minutes. It is found

that the mass of the water had reduced by 0.10 kg in that time.

Estimate the specific heat of vaporization of steam.

Solution

Heat given out by the heater = P t = 600 × 6 × 60

Heat absorbed by steam = 0.10 × L v

Heat gained = heat lost, therefore, 600 × 6 × 60 = 0.10 × L v = 2.16 ×

106J / Kg

Evaporation
Factors affecting the rate of evaporation

• Temperature

• Surface area

• Draught (hot and dry surrounding)

• Humidity

Comparison between boiling and evaporation

Evaporation

1. Takes place at all temperature.

2. Takes place on the surface (no bubbles formed)

3. Decrease in atmospheric pressure increases the rate.

Boiling

1.Takes place at a specific temperature

2.Takes place throughout the liquid ( bubbles formed)

3.Decreases as atmospheric pressure lowers

Applications of cooling by evaporation

a) Sweating

b) Cooling of water in a porous pot

c) The refrigerator

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