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specific heat capacity
Water has much higher specific heat than lead. All metals have fairly low specific heat values.
heat constant = mass * specific heat capacity * temperature change
The specific heat of americium is: 0,11 J/gK
change in temperature does not effect specific heat. for example,specific heat of water is 4.14 j/g.k at any temperature
Brine is a salt solution. It does not need to be concentrated in order to be brine.
No. Brine is water that has concentrated salts in it, primarily sodium chloride. Sulfate is an ion with the formula SO42- Because it is a charges species it cannot exist as its own substance but is rather accompanied by a positive ion. There are some sulfates in brine , however.
Concentrated brine is water with a large quantity of salt dissolved in it. Liquids like water have a limit to how much can be dissolved in them before they become 'saturated' - nothing more will dissolve because it can't 'fit'. This limit is proportional to temperature, so heating the brine will allow the sugar to dissolve, but cooling it again will cause the sugar and/or some of the salt to reform.
"Brine" is a solution of a salt ... usually sodium chloride ... in water. Any solution of a salt in water may properly be referred to as 'brine'. You can cool it and make it cold. You can heat it and make it hot. You can cool it some more and freeze it. You can heat it some more and boil it, except that when you do that, you wouldn't actually say that the 'brine' is boiling, because the water is boiling and evaporating but the salt is staying where it is and making stronger brine.
Multiply .3631 and 1.185 together and take that answer and multiply it by 175. That's your answer.
Desalination usually produces fresh water and more concentrated brine, so the only real product is fresh water.
specific heat of lpg
Specific heat has nothing to do with specific volume.
Specific heat of sinter
rice specific heat
Dilute
A solution is said to be concentrated when it has a high proportion of the solute. There is no specific threshold at which the term comes into use.