The electrical conductance of a sample (y, measured in [S]iemens) is measured at various temperatures (x, absolute temperature measured in [K]elvin). The accuracy of the conductance measurement is 6%.
In 1889 Svante Arrhenius proposed a theory explaining that many thermodynamic processes should depend on absolute temperature in a particular way (now called the Arrhenius equation):
Y = Y∞ exp(-E/(kT))
where E is the excitation energy, k is Boltzmann's constant, and T is the absolute temperature.
y = A exp(B/x)
E = -Bk
Boltzmann's constant, k, has the value: 1.3807 × 10-23 J/K. Use a spreadsheet to calculate the excitation energy from B, and properly report (sigfigs, error, units) the value.
| X (K) | Y (S) |
|---|---|
| 19.1 | 8.86E-4 |
| 19.5 | 1.04E-3 |
| 20 | 1.64E-3 |
| 31 | 6.31E-2 |
| 53 | 1.11 |
| 55 | 1.25 |
| 67 | 2.35 |
| 69 | 2.91 |
| 92 | 5.48 |
| 190 | 18.7 |