1125 J of energy is used to heat 250 g of iron to 55 °C. The specific heat capacity of iron is 0.45 J/(g·°C).

What was the temperature of the iron before it was heated?
55 °C

35 °C

20 °C

45 °C

Not sure how to solve this problem, can anyone walk me through it?

Never mind- I figured it out.

The answer is 45

q = mass x specific heat Fe x (Tfinal-Tinitial)\

1125 J = 250 x 0.45 J/g*C x (55 - Tinitial)
Solve for Tinitial
Post your work if you get stuck.

To solve this problem, we can use the formula:

Q = mcΔT

Where:
Q = amount of heat absorbed or released
m = mass
c = specific heat capacity
ΔT = change in temperature

In this case, we are given:
Q = 1125 J
m = 250 g
c = 0.45 J/(g·°C)
ΔT = 55 °C

We want to find the initial temperature (T1) before the iron was heated.

Rearranging the formula, we have:

Q = mcΔT
Q = mc(T2 - T1)

Plug in the given values:

1125 J = (250 g)(0.45 J/(g·°C))(55 °C - T1)

Now, we can solve for T1:

1125 J = (250 g)(0.45 J/(g·°C))(55 °C - T1)

Divide both sides of the equation by (250 g)(0.45 J/(g·°C)):

1125 J / (250 g)(0.45 J/(g·°C)) = 55 °C - T1

Now, calculate the left side of the equation:

1125 J / (250 g)(0.45 J/(g·°C)) ≈ 10

Substitute this value back into the equation:

10 ≈ 55 °C - T1

Now, solve for T1:

T1 ≈ 55 °C - 10
T1 ≈ 45 °C

Therefore, the temperature of the iron before it was heated is approximately 45 °C.