If I remember my high school physics correctly, the heat required to heat an object is
Calories of heat required equals Specific Heat for the material times weight in grams times degrees C temperature rise.
This does not allow for heat losses in the process, which I am sure will be significant.
Also note, that heating something to as high as 1100 C might boil some volatiles or send the material through at least a second order transition, which will alter the heat requirement, in which case, you might also need the latent heats of vaporisation and fusion, as well as the data for the entropy in any second order changes. Please verify these comments, as it is about 40 years since I studied this, and all my books are burried in a cupboard, lost or on loat to who knows who
Regards
pat