A small pebble is heated and placed in a foam cup calorimeter containing water at 25 °C. The water reaches a maximum temperature of 27 °C. If the pebble released 532.1 J of heat to the water, what mass (in g) of water was in the calorimeter?

heat lost by pebble + heat gained by water = 0

heat lost by pebble = 532.1 J
heat gained by water = mass H2O x specific heat H2O x (Tfinal-Tinitial)
Set q = heat gaine by water and solve for mass H2O.

To solve this problem, we can use the formula for heat transfer:

Q = (m × c × ΔT)

Where:
Q = heat transfer (in J)
m = mass of the substance (in g)
c = specific heat capacity of the substance (in J/g°C)
ΔT = change in temperature (in °C)

Given values:
Q = 532.1 J
ΔT = 27 °C - 25 °C = 2 °C

Assuming the specific heat capacity of water is approximately 4.18 J/g°C, we can rearrange the formula to solve for the mass (m) of water:

m = Q / (c × ΔT)

Substituting the given values into the formula:

m = 532.1 J / (4.18 J/g°C × 2 °C)

m ≈ 63.96 g

Therefore, the mass of water in the calorimeter is approximately 63.96 g.

To find the mass of water in the calorimeter, you need to use the equation for heat transfer:

q = mcΔT

Where:
- q is the heat transferred
- m is the mass of the substance (in this case, water)
- c is the specific heat capacity of the substance
- ΔT is the change in temperature

In this case, the pebble released 532.1 J of heat to the water, and the water temperature increased from 25 °C to 27 °C.

The specific heat capacity of water is approximately 4.18 J/g °C.

Substituting the given values into the equation:

532.1 J = m * 4.18 J/g °C * (27 °C - 25 °C)

Now, we can solve for the mass (m):

532.1 J = m * 4.18 J/g °C * 2 °C

Rearranging the equation:

m = 532.1 J / (4.18 J/g °C * 2 °C)

Calculating:

m = 532.1 J / 8.36 J/g

m ≈ 63.82 g

Therefore, the mass of water in the calorimeter is approximately 63.82 grams.