A researcher studying the nutritional value of a new candy places a 4.40-gram sample of the candy inside a bomb calorimeter and combusts it in excess oxygen. The observed temperature increase is 2.87 °C. If the heat capacity of the calorimeter is 41.50 kJ·K–1, how many nutritional Calories are there per gram of the candy?

Respuesta :

Hagrid
Calories = 1gCandy * (41.50KJ / 4.40gCandy) * (239calories / 1KJ)

q = (41.50 KJ / K) * (276.02 K)
q = 11454.83 KJ

Calories = 1gCandy * (11454.83 K/ 4.40gCandy) * (1 KCal / 4.184 KJ)
Calories = 622 KCal

Answer:

Nutritional calories per gram of candy = [tex]\frac{2.74\times 10^{3}}{4.40}cal/g=6.23\times 10^{2} nutritional cal/g[/tex]

Explanation:

Total amount of heat released due to combustion of the candy = ([tex]C_{cal}\times \Delta T[/tex])

where [tex]C_{cal}[/tex] is the heat capacity of calorimeter and [tex]\Delta T[/tex] is the increase in temperature.

Here, [tex]C_{cal}[/tex] = 41.50 kJ/K and [tex]\Delta T[/tex] = (273+2.87) K = 275.87 K

So, Total amount of heat released due to combustion of the candy = [tex](41.50\times 275.87)kJ=11449 kJ[/tex]

Now, 1 kJ = 0.239 nutritional cal

So, 11449 kJ = [tex](0.239\times 11449)cal=2.74\times 10^{3}cal[/tex]

hence nutritional calories per gram of candy = [tex]\frac{2.74\times 10^{3}}{4.40}cal/g=6.23\times 10^{2} nutritional cal/g[/tex]