A large paraffin candle has a mass of 96.83 gram. A metal cup with 100.0 mL of water at 16.2°C absorbs the heat from the burning candle and increases its temperature to 35.7°C. Once the burning is ceased, the temperature of the water was 35.7°C and the paraffin had a mass of 96.14 gram. Determine the heat of combustion of paraffin in kJ/gram. GIVEN: density of water = 1.0 g/mL.

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Author:Steven S. Zumdahl, Susan A. Zumdahl, Donald J. DeCoste
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Chapter1: Chemical Foundations
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Exercise 3. Solve this extra challenging problem.
A large paraffin candle has a mass of 96.83 gram. A metal cup with 100.0 mL of water at 16.2°C
absorbs the heat from the burning candle and increases its temperature to 35.7°C. Once the burning is
ceased, the temperature of the water was 35.7°C and the paraffin had a mass of 96.14 gram. Determine
the heat of combustion of paraffin in kJ/gram. GIVEN: density of water = 1.0 g/mL.
Consider the problem above. Identify at least 1 source of error as you can. Indicate as
well the direction of error that would have resulted. That is, identify whether the error would
have caused the experimentally derived value to be less than or more than the accepted value.
Transcribed Image Text:Exercise 3. Solve this extra challenging problem. A large paraffin candle has a mass of 96.83 gram. A metal cup with 100.0 mL of water at 16.2°C absorbs the heat from the burning candle and increases its temperature to 35.7°C. Once the burning is ceased, the temperature of the water was 35.7°C and the paraffin had a mass of 96.14 gram. Determine the heat of combustion of paraffin in kJ/gram. GIVEN: density of water = 1.0 g/mL. Consider the problem above. Identify at least 1 source of error as you can. Indicate as well the direction of error that would have resulted. That is, identify whether the error would have caused the experimentally derived value to be less than or more than the accepted value.
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