Calorimetry Experiment
Measure the heat energy released by burning food samples (peanuts, candles) using a simple calorimeter. Observe how different fuels release different amounts of energy.
Select a fuel source to burn and measure its heat of combustion.
The Science Behind Calorimetry
q = m × c × ΔT
Where:
q = heat energy (J)
m = mass of water (g)
c = specific heat capacity of water (4.18 J/g°C)
ΔT = temperature change (°C)
- Known mass of water in calorimeter
- Measure initial temperature
- Burn known mass of fuel beneath calorimeter
- Measure temperature change
- Calculate energy released per gram of fuel
Fuel Source | Energy (kJ/g) | Composition |
---|---|---|
Peanut | ~24 | Fats, proteins, carbohydrates |
Candle Wax | ~42 | Long-chain hydrocarbons |
Wood | ~16 | Cellulose, lignin |
Coal | ~30 | Carbon, hydrocarbons |
- Heat of Combustion: Energy released when 1g of substance burns completely
- Exothermic Reaction: Releases heat energy to surroundings
- Energy Content: Depends on chemical bonds in the fuel
- Calorimeter: Device that measures heat changes
- Food energy content (nutrition labels)
- Fuel efficiency comparisons
- Bomb calorimetry for industrial testing
- Energy content of biofuels
- Fire safety and flammability testing