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Quote from: alancalverd on 02/06/2022 18:09:27Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 31/05/2022 15:51:52I think it involves chemical energy, in the form of chemical bonds.No.Lithium batteries can develop an internal short circuit. Used to cause the occasional laptop computer to burst into flames so laptop use was were banned from passenger aircraft for a while, then a few early Dreamliners caught fire thanks to the aircraft's own hi-tech lightweight starter batteries!What makes you think that the energy is not stored in the form of chemical bonds?
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 31/05/2022 15:51:52I think it involves chemical energy, in the form of chemical bonds.No.Lithium batteries can develop an internal short circuit. Used to cause the occasional laptop computer to burst into flames so laptop use was were banned from passenger aircraft for a while, then a few early Dreamliners caught fire thanks to the aircraft's own hi-tech lightweight starter batteries!
I think it involves chemical energy, in the form of chemical bonds.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 04/06/2022 15:21:20Quote from: Bored chemist on 04/06/2022 15:15:28Here's how they did it a few hundred years ago.https://www.nature.com/scitable/content/ice-calorimeter-developed-by-lavoisier-and-laplace-14898943/It doesn't show that the ice and water are at exactly the same temperature at every point.It does; it's just that you don't understand it.If you have ice and water at equilibrium, in a closed vessel surrounded by ice and water, what other temperature can it be apart from 0C?Consider the following before you answer.(1) That if you add heat to the system, you won't change the temperature, you will just met some ice.(2) That if you remove heat from the system, you won't reduce the temperature, you will just freeze some water(3) Since the ice and water inside the container is at the same temperature as the ice and water outside it, there is no temperature gradient across the container wall, and therefore no heat transfer.So, if there was a transfer of heat, the temperature wouldn't change, and there's no mechanism for a transfer of heat anyway.
Quote from: Bored chemist on 04/06/2022 15:15:28Here's how they did it a few hundred years ago.https://www.nature.com/scitable/content/ice-calorimeter-developed-by-lavoisier-and-laplace-14898943/It doesn't show that the ice and water are at exactly the same temperature at every point.
Here's how they did it a few hundred years ago.https://www.nature.com/scitable/content/ice-calorimeter-developed-by-lavoisier-and-laplace-14898943/
Those were not I've observed in my experiment.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 04/06/2022 14:54:28Maybe you can understand if you've read the post as a whole, including which statement I was responding to. Otherwise, you'll keep wondering.No that doesn't help because you have been told multiple time that the temperature would be 0C. For some bizarre reason no matter how many times you are given the correct answer you continue to ask the question.
Maybe you can understand if you've read the post as a whole, including which statement I was responding to. Otherwise, you'll keep wondering.
Quote from: Origin on 04/06/2022 15:39:26Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 04/06/2022 14:54:28Maybe you can understand if you've read the post as a whole, including which statement I was responding to. Otherwise, you'll keep wondering.No that doesn't help because you have been told multiple time that the temperature would be 0C. For some bizarre reason no matter how many times you are given the correct answer you continue to ask the question.You haven't even tried.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 28/05/2022 17:05:53Quote from: Bored chemist on 28/05/2022 12:06:16It's not a fallacy if they are an authority.It seems like you haven't learned about Galileo. Galileo did a thought experiment and overturned the views of Aristotle.And then, because he was trying to explain it to people who were unaccustomed to actually thinking, he did the practical experiment.So what?
Quote from: Bored chemist on 28/05/2022 12:06:16It's not a fallacy if they are an authority.It seems like you haven't learned about Galileo.
It's not a fallacy if they are an authority.
You haven't even tried.
Melting or freezing still happened depending on the ambient temperature.
Try looking at it a different way. A sort of Galilean thought experiment. Between 0 and 100°C, H2O is a liquidBelow 0°C it is a solidSo what happens at 0°C?Either the solid and liquid phases coexist in equilibrium, or they spontaneously vanish.What do we observe? They don't vanish.
The temperature gradient will form naturally through buoyancy.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 05/06/2022 06:44:07 The temperature gradient will form naturally through buoyancy.No it will not.Because, if all the water is at 0 C then it all has the same density and there can not be a gradient.Why don't you understand that?
In my experiment, outside of the large plastic container was either -4°C or 4°C. The inner side of the container will be somewhere between 0°C and -4°C or 4°C.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 06/06/2022 12:39:06In my experiment, outside of the large plastic container was either -4°C or 4°C. The inner side of the container will be somewhere between 0°C and -4°C or 4°C.Then there is a delta T, so there will be heat transfer. So your experiment will not address the question posed in the OP. So you get to go in circles and never accept an answer to the OP. Is this how you have fun, confusing yourself?
You can simply have faith to your theory without bothering to check with reality.
In my experiment, outside of the large plastic container was either -4°C or 4°C.
What you think as obviously simple might be hard to demonstrate in real life.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 06/06/2022 12:39:06In my experiment, outside of the large plastic container was either -4°C or 4°C.Then you did a poor experiment.
We are smart enough to understand the underlying principals and can apply them to different situations without having to run an experiment.
Here are my main points in this thread :1. Heat flows from higher temperature object to lower temperature object.2. Ice and water at melting point has the same average temperature, 0C.3. At melting point, water has higher internal energy compared to ice.4. Local temperature can be different from average temperature.Is there any point you don't agree with?