214 MECHANICAL ENGINEERING PRINCIPLES
Quantity of heat required for the water is given by:
QW=mc(t 2 −t 1 )
=(1kg)
(
4. 2
kg
kg K
)
( 373 − 293 )K
= 4. 2 ×80 kJ
i.e. QW=336 kJ
For the copper container:
m=500 g= 0 .5kg,t 1 =293 K,
t 2 =373 K and
c=390 J/(kg K)= 0 .39 kJ/(kg K)
Quantity of heat required for the copper container is
given by:
QC=mc(t 2 −t 1 )
=( 0 .5kg)( 0 .39 kJ/(kg K)(80 K)
i.e. QC= 15 .6kJ
Total quantity of heat required,
Q=QW+QC= 336 + 15. 6 = 351 .6kJ
Now try the following exercise
Exercise 97 Further problems on specific
heat capacity
- Determine the quantity of heat energy (in
megajoules) required to raise the tem-
perature of 10 kg of water from 0°Cto
50 °C. Assume the specific heat capacity
of water is 4200 J/(kg°C). [2.1 MJ] - Some copper, having a mass of 20 kg,
cools from a temperature of 120°Cto
70 °C. If the specific heat capacity of
copper is 390 J/(kg°C), how much heat
energy is lost by the copper? [390 kJ] - A block of aluminium having a specific
heat capacity of 950 J/(kg°C) is heated
from 60°C to its melting point at 660°C.
If the quantity of heat required is 2.85 MJ,
determine the mass of the aluminium
block. [5 kg] - 20.8 kJ of heat energy is required to raise
the temperature of 2 kg of lead from
16 °Cto96°C. Determine the specific
heat capacity of lead. [130 J/kg°C]
5. 250 kJ of heat energy is supplied to 10 kg
of iron which is initially at a temperature
of 15°C. If the specific heat capacity of
iron is 500 J/(kg°C) determine its final
temperature. [65°C]
19.4 Change of state
A material may exist in any one of three
states — solid, liquid or gas. If heat is supplied at a
constant rate to some ice initially at, say,− 30 °C, its
temperature rises as shown in Figure 19.1. Initially
the temperature increases from− 30 °Cto0°Cas
shown by the lineAB. It then remains constant at
0 °C for the timeBCrequired for the ice to melt
into water.
120
100
80
60
Temperature /
°C
40
20
0
− 30
A
BC
DE
F
Time
Figure 19.1
When melting commences the energy gained by
continual heating is offset by the energy required
for the change of state and the temperature remains
constant even though heating is continued. When
the ice is completely melted to water, continual
heating raises the temperature to 100°C, as shown
byCDin Figure 19.1. The water then begins to
boil and the temperature again remains constant
at 100°C, shown asDE, until all the water has
vaporised.
Continual heating raises the temperature of the
steam as shown byEF in the region where the
steam is termed superheated.
Changes of state from solid to liquid or liquid to
gas occur without change of temperature and such