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OT chemical engineers
Posted on 5/4/17 at 9:33 pm
Posted on 5/4/17 at 9:33 pm
How much energy in Btu is required to heat one gallon of liquid carbon tetrachloride at 0 degrees Celsius and 1atm at its boiling point at 1 atm?
Just trying to get through the finals grind.
Just trying to get through the finals grind.
Posted on 5/4/17 at 9:36 pm to tigerclaw10
If you can't figure this one out on your own I have some bad news for you re: thermo 2.
Posted on 5/4/17 at 9:36 pm to tigerclaw10
Damn I'm so glad I bitches out and went to CM
Posted on 5/4/17 at 9:36 pm to tigerclaw10
Nah fam frick that shite!
Good Luck with finals though
Good Luck with finals though
Posted on 5/4/17 at 9:37 pm to tigerclaw10
Dude this is a high school chemistry question. It's the sensible heat from 0 deg C up to the boiling point (whatever it is) plus the latent heat of vaporization at 1 atmosphere.
You'll probably get numbers in the table in BTU/lb so you'll need to know the specific gravity to convert gallons to mass.
You'll probably get numbers in the table in BTU/lb so you'll need to know the specific gravity to convert gallons to mass.
Posted on 5/4/17 at 9:42 pm to geauxbears08
I got 36,499.627 Btu, but this teacher likes to make life difficult and only answers to the right decimal are correct. This is thermo by the way, and I do have an A for the people who say I won't do well in Cheg thermo.
Posted on 5/4/17 at 9:43 pm to tigerclaw10
1 - 32 x .5556
This post was edited on 5/4/17 at 9:45 pm
Posted on 5/4/17 at 9:49 pm to tigerclaw10
Unit analysis is your friend. Best advice I've ever gotten non-sexual related
Posted on 5/4/17 at 10:06 pm to tigerclaw10
q=mass*specific heat capacity * deltaT
that's the sensible heat
Add in latent heat of vaporization * mass for the heat to vaporize it.
NIST has a database of all the things you need with a little googling. Put it in engineering units and solve away.
that's the sensible heat
Add in latent heat of vaporization * mass for the heat to vaporize it.
NIST has a database of all the things you need with a little googling. Put it in engineering units and solve away.
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