AP Specific Heat (Final Temp. Metal Dropped into Water)
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- Опубликовано: 20 окт 2024
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This advanced video takes you through the procedure for solving for the final temperature of the mixture when a metal when it is dropped into a known amount of water. This topic is usually covered in AP chemistry or a first year college chemistry course.
You saved me. I am studying for finals and couldn't wrap my head around this problem. Thanks. :D
this was so simple now that you have explained it. thank you so much
Finally I found something useful. Just the one I was looking for. Great video. Thank you so much.
Thanks man you kept me from ripping my hair out trying to understand AP Chemistry
Thanks so much! I like to work the problem with you, and liked that the calculator results were always within view.
Wish my teacher didnt just speed past this, thanks for the help.
just made my life so much easier bless you
No video I've seen ever addresses where the Joules over grams degrees Celsius goes. They just kinda disappear in that step where you distribute the specific heat capacity to the (Tf-Ti). What's cancelling out the Joules?
Thank you!! I needed to start at the idea of the heat gain and heat loss.
Thankyou so much! Just what i needed to know
Thank you for explaining something that my Foundation Of College Chemistry book decided to omit to teach yet they still asked the question
Excellent calculation, how would you go about calculating the temperature of the water? Tf of water and Tf of metal comparable final temperatures?
How would you find the mass of the water if the final temperature had to equal 0 deg.
you're an actual lifesaver
Thanks
Can i ask?
Why the sign of m (g) and c (J/g°C) is missing, when you put the answer in the tf?
I just threw in the numerical set up if the units are not there.
Can someone solve this question? Do I need to refer steam table to find the value of specific heat, specific latent heat & specific heat of steam as those information are not given?
The question are as follows...
"Determine the amount of heat needed to completely transform 1 g of water at 15°C to steam at 115°C".
this is ap? im in a priniciples of engineering class and we are doing this! also thanks for the tutorial
Students first see this in AP chem. It pops up again in many different courses.
Great tutorial. What happens if two metals get dropped in to the water? does the equation change?
I would calculate one metal and water then use the result to calculate the second metal
You're insane! Thank you so much man
2024 attendance 🙏🙏🙏
hey so what happens to the J? Do I just ignore it or is it cancelled through the process?
i was wondering the same thing...
Thanks, this helped a lot.
Now I just gotta figure out how to do it with 2 objects..
Why is metal negative?
Ky Go it lost energy to the water
THANK YOU YOU ARE A LEGEND
Awesome vid!! Thank you :)
This helps me lot
thanks for the help
thank you so much!
You're welcome!
Thank you!
You're welcome!
thank you so much
Welcome 😊
thank you sir
Most welcome
I loooove your voice
Thanks man!!
much appreciated!
Glad to help!
Im not even in ap. Just normal chemistry and were doing this
Easton J i’m not even in chemistry and i’m doing this
thx a lot
Thank you!!!!
So very welcome. If it helped, please like and subscribe to the channel.
Lifesaver
Well I know I fked up my midterm
holy shit the way my teacher taught this sucked. this is much netter
I LOVE YOY
No entiendo ni venga :v
thank you!
thank you so much
You're welcome!
thank you!
You're welcome!