Let's see if I can make it clearer.
For simplicity I'm going to call the ~2mol of 0C water "A" and the ~1mol of 100C water "B".
From my previous post, I'm saying the following is true:
S
total = S
A + S
BThis equation follows from what I said earlier. Taking A and B, putting them next to each other until they come to the same temperature, then mixing them is equivalent to taking the cold A and hot B and mixing them straight away (and I'm conjecturing that mixing water with water has no associated change in entropy)
In this equation S
X is the entropy change from heating or cooling, which I'm saying is n*C
v*ln(T
f/T
i)
So, the total entropy should be:
S
total = n
A*C
v*ln(T
f/T
A) + n
B*C
v*ln(T
f/T
B)
Where does T
f come from? Well, you should have already done stuff on thermal equilibrium, the only heat being transferred is from B to A, from the 100C water to the 0C water. So to get Tf set q
A=q
B and solve for the final temperature.
Just so you know where I got that n*C
v*ln(Tf/Ti), I remembered the definition of entropy and integrated in the following way (this forum really needs LaTeX support!):
So you might want to double-check that this is the right equation (I may have messed up my maths)