That completely depends on the temperature of the water when
the gas flame is first ignited, which you've neglected to mention.
You would need to remove approximately 1200 BTUs of heat to convert a gallon of water to ice. There are 8.34 lb in a gallon of water, which converting to lb-moles is 0.463. The latent heat of crystallization for water is -2583.4 BTU/lb-mole. Multiplying the two together and you get -1197 BTUs, which means you need to remove that amount of heat to convert the gallon of water to ice.
Heat required for this transition is given as the the sum of three heatsheat required for heating the ice from -5 degree Celsius +latent heat(conversion of ice at zero degree to water at zero degrees)+heat required to heat the water from 0 to 5 degree CelsiusHeating of ice=m x s x delta T,where m is the mass ,s is the specific heat of ice=200x0.5x5=500calmelting of ice=mxlatent heat=200x80=16,000calHeating of water=m x s x delta T,where m is the mass ,s is the specific heat of water =200x1x5=1000calTotal heat required=500+16,000+1000=17,500 cal
heat will flow from the iron to the water until both are the same temperature
"Watt" is a rate of moving energy. The more watts you use, the faster the waterwill heat up. The fewer watts you use, the slower it will heat. If you can affordthe time to wait, then any amount of power will do the job, no matter how small.
about 40
it takes 2 pounds of it
2.4705 watts/hour
There is no natural hot water occurring in the Antarctic.When hot water is required, heat is applied to ice, which is abundant.
You would need to remove approximately 1200 BTUs of heat to convert a gallon of water to ice. There are 8.34 lb in a gallon of water, which converting to lb-moles is 0.463. The latent heat of crystallization for water is -2583.4 BTU/lb-mole. Multiplying the two together and you get -1197 BTUs, which means you need to remove that amount of heat to convert the gallon of water to ice.
2 cents
170o
The mints will have a natural saturation amount. If you add a mint to one glass of water, it will have the same effects as if you added a gallon of water. The only difference is if you were to heat the water, or shake the water while the mints are in it.
3 gallons because it has more heat energy and it gets warmer
fret
natural gas + heat ---> carbon monoxide + water
probably dont know for sure
depends how big the heating source is