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A coin dealer, offered a rare silver coin, suspected that it might be a counterf

ID: 744650 • Letter: A

Question

A coin dealer, offered a rare silver coin, suspected that it might be a counterfeit nickel copy. The dealer heated the coin, which weighed 18.0 g to 100

Explanation / Answer

q) A coin dealer, offered a rare silver coin, suspected that it might be a counterfeit nickel copy. The dealer heated the coin, which weighed 13.0 g to 100°C in boiling water and then dropped the hot coin into 29.0 g of water at T = 18.0°C in an insulated coffee-cup, and measured the rise in temperature. If the coin was really made of silver, what would the final temperature of the water be (in °C)? (for nickel, s = 0.445 J/g-degC; for silver, s = 0.233 J/g-degC ) ans ) Let UNITs guide you; always USE THEM in your calculation to prevent errors Firstly, the eqn: hot coin + cold water ---> warm coin and warm water heat gained by water = heat lost by coin= spht of coin J/gC * 13.0 g * (100-T)C heat gained by water = 29.0 g H2O * 4.186 J/gC * (T-18.0)C heat lost for Ni coin = 0.445 J/gC * 13.0 g * (100-T)C heat lost for Ag coin = 0.233 J/gC * 13.0 g * (100-T)C for Ni coin: 0.445 J/gC * 13.0 g * (100-T(Ni-final) )C = 29.0 g H2O * 4.186 J/gC * (T(Ni-final)-18.0)C SOLVE for T(Ni-final) T (Ag-final) ~ T (Ni-final) * (0.233 J/gC / 0.445 J/gC) = ?? check by solving for T(Ag-final) the way you did T(Ni-final)

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