I'm having some trouble finishing some calculations on a chem lab. I am hung up on using specific heat to identify an unknown metal.
We used two Styrofoam cups to make a calorimeter. Here are all the measurements I have taken from lab earlier this week.
- Mass of empty styrofoam cup: 2.17g
- Mass of styrofoam cup with 100.00mL cool water: 100.5g
- Mass of 100.00mL cool water: 98.33g
- Mass of unknown metal: 70.16g
- Temperature of cool water: 20c
- Temperature of metal in boiling water: 83c
- Temperature of cool water/metal: 23c
- Change in temperature: 3c
- Change in metal temperature: 60c
Now I need to find heat energy gained by the cool water:
(not sure if this is right)
Mass of water x change in temp x SH of water
Heat (cal) = 98.33g x 3c x 1.00cal/gc (calories per gram celcius) = 294.99cal
For the next part I am asked to find the specific heat of the unknown metal using the calories calculated above, this is where I get lost.
294.99cal = ____ g x ____ c x (SH) cal/g (calories per gram celcius) = ?
This should give me the specific heat of the metal, this is where I could use some help.