A 25 g piece of lead at 90 °C (called A) is added to 25 mL of water at 20 °C (called B) in an open flask under 1 atm pressure. (Note: lead is dense, so 10 g of lead is only about 1 cm³) Assume the density of water (1 g/mL) is constant in this temperature range. The molecular weight of water is 18.0 g/mol. The molecular weight of lead is 207 g/mol. Assume the molar heat capacity (Cp) of water in this temperature range is 75.3 J K-1 mol-¹ and lead is 26.4 J K- 1 mol-¹. Calculate the final temperature of the system (lead + water) assuming there is no heat loss to the surroundings.

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A 25 g piece of lead at 90 °C (called A) is added to 25 mL
of water at 20 °C (called B) in an open flask under 1 atm
pressure. (Note: lead is dense, so 10 g of lead is only
about 1 cm³)
Assume the density of water (1 g/mL) is constant in this
temperature range. The molecular weight of water is 18.0
g/mol. The molecular weight of lead is 207 g/mol.
Assume the molar heat capacity (Cp) of water in this
temperature range is 75.3 J K-¹ mol-¹ and lead is 26.4 J K-
1 mol-¹.
Calculate the final temperature of the system (lead +
water) assuming there is no heat loss to the surroundings.
Transcribed Image Text:A 25 g piece of lead at 90 °C (called A) is added to 25 mL of water at 20 °C (called B) in an open flask under 1 atm pressure. (Note: lead is dense, so 10 g of lead is only about 1 cm³) Assume the density of water (1 g/mL) is constant in this temperature range. The molecular weight of water is 18.0 g/mol. The molecular weight of lead is 207 g/mol. Assume the molar heat capacity (Cp) of water in this temperature range is 75.3 J K-¹ mol-¹ and lead is 26.4 J K- 1 mol-¹. Calculate the final temperature of the system (lead + water) assuming there is no heat loss to the surroundings.
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