1 / 51

Chapter 9: Fluids

Chapter 9: Fluids. Introduction to Fluids Pressure Pascal’s Principle Gravity and Fluid Pressure Measurement of Pressure Archimedes’ Principle Continuity Equation Bernoulli’s Equation Viscosity and Viscous Drag Surface Tension. § 9.1 Fluids.

Download Presentation

Chapter 9: Fluids

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 9: Fluids • Introduction to Fluids • Pressure • Pascal’s Principle • Gravity and Fluid Pressure • Measurement of Pressure • Archimedes’ Principle • Continuity Equation • Bernoulli’s Equation • Viscosity and Viscous Drag • Surface Tension

  2. §9.1 Fluids A liquid will flow to take the shape of the container that holds it. A gas will completely fill its container. Fluids are easily deformable by external forces. A liquid is incompressible. Its volume is fixed and is impossible to change.

  3. §9.2 Pressure Pressure arises from the collisions between the particles of a fluid with another object (container walls for example). There is a momentum change (impulse) that is away from the container walls. There must be a force exerted on the particle by the wall.

  4. By Newton’s 3rd Law, there is a force on the wall due to the particle. Pressure is defined as The units of pressure are N/m2 and are called Pascals (Pa). Note: 1 atmosphere (atm) = 101.3 kPa

  5. Example (text problem 9.1): Someone steps on your toe, exerting a force of 500 N on an area of 1.0 cm2. What is the average pressure on that area in atmospheres?

  6. §9.3 Pascal’s Principle A change in pressure at any point in a confined fluid is transmitted everywhere throughout the fluid. (This is useful in making a hydraulic lift.)

  7. The applied force is transmitted to the piston of cross-sectional area A2 here. Apply a force F1 here to a piston of cross-sectional area A1.

  8. Mathematically,

  9. Example: Assume that a force of 500 N (about 110 lbs) is applied to the smaller piston in the previous figure. For each case, compute the force on the larger piston if the ratio of the piston areas (A2/A1) are 1, 10, and 100. Using Pascal’s Principle:

  10. The work done pressing the smaller piston (#1) equals the work done by the larger piston (#2).

  11. Example: In the previous example, for the case A2/A1 = 10, it was found that F2/F1 = 10. If the larger piston needs to rise by 1 m, how far must the smaller piston be depressed? Using the result on the previous slide,

  12. §9.4 Gravity’s Effect on Fluid Pressure FBD for the fluid cylinder P1A A cylinder of fluid w P2A

  13. Apply Newton’s 2nd Law to the fluid cylinder: If P1 (the pressure at the top of the cylinder) is known, then the above expression can be used to find the variation of pressure with depth in a fluid.

  14. If the top of the fluid column is placed at the surface of the fluid, then P1=Patm if the container is open.

  15. Example (text problem 9.15): At the surface of a freshwater lake, the pressure is 105 kPa. (a) What is the pressure increase in going 35.0 m below the surface?

  16. Example: The surface pressure on the planet Venus is 95 atm. How far below the surface of the ocean on Earth do you need to be to experience the same pressure? The density of seawater is 1025 kg/m3.

  17. §9.5 Measuring Pressure A manometer is a U-shaped tube that is partially filled with liquid. Both ends of the tube are open to the atmosphere.

  18. A container of gas is connected to one end of the U-tube If there is a pressure difference between the gas and the atmosphere, a force will be exerted on the fluid in the U-tube. This changes the equilibrium position of the fluid in the tube.

  19. From the figure: At point C Also The pressure at point B is the pressure of the gas.

  20. A Barometer The atmosphere pushes on the container of mercury which forces mercury up the closed, inverted tube. The distance d is called the barometric pressure.

  21. From the figure and Atmospheric pressure is equivalent to a column of mercury 76.0 cm tall.

  22. Example (text problem 9.22): An IV is connected to a patient’s vein. The blood pressure in the vein has a gauge pressure of 12 mm of mercury. At least how far above the vein must the IV bag be placed in order for fluid to flow into the vein? Assume that the density of the IV fluid is the same as blood. The pressure is equivalent to raising a column of mercury 12 mm tall. Blood: IV:

  23. Example continued: At a minimum, the gauge pressures must be equal. When h2 is large enough, fluid will flow from high pressure to low pressure.

  24. F1 w F2 §9.6 Archimedes’ Principle An FBD for an object floating submerged in a fluid. The total force on the block due to the fluid is called the buoyant force.

  25. The magnitude of the buoyant force is: From before: The result is

  26. Archimedes’ Principle: A fluid exerts an upward buoyant force on a submerged object equal in magnitude to the weight of the volume of fluid displaced by the object.

  27. FB w Example (text problem 9.30): A flat-bottomed barge loaded with coal has a mass of 3.0105 kg. The barge is 20.0 m long and 10.0 m wide. It floats in fresh water. What is the depth of the barge below the waterline? FBD for the barge

  28. FB w Example (text problem 9.34): A piece of metal is released under water. The volume of the metal is 50.0 cm3 and its specific gravity is 5.0. What is its initial acceleration? (Note: when v=0, there is no drag force.) FBD for the metal The buoyant force is the weight of the fluid displaced by the object Solve for a:

  29. Example continued: Since the object is completely submerged V=Vobject. where water = 1000 kg/m3 is the density of water at 4 °C. Given

  30. V1 = constant V2 = constant v1v2 §9.7 Fluid Flow A moving fluid will exert forces parallel to the surface over which it moves, unlike a static fluid. This gives rise to a viscous force that impedes the forward motion of the fluid. A steady flow is one where the velocity at a given point in a fluid is constant.

  31. Steady flow is laminar; the fluid flows in layers. The path that the fluid in these layers takes is called a streamline. Streamlines do not cross. An ideal fluid is incompressible, undergoes laminar flow, and has no viscosity.

  32. The continuity equation—Conservation of mass. The amount of mass that flows though the cross-sectional area A1 is the same as the mass that flows through cross-sectional area A2.

  33. is the mass flow rate (units kg/s) is the volume flow rate (units m3/s) The continuity equation is If the fluid is incompressible, then 1= 2.

  34. Example (text problem 9.41): A garden hose of inner radius 1.0 cm carries water at 2.0 m/s. The nozzle at the end has radius 0.2 cm. How fast does the water move through the constriction?

  35. §9.8 Bernoulli’s Equation Bernoulli’s equation is a statement of energy conservation.

  36. Work per unit volume done by the fluid Potential energy per unit volume Kinetic energy per unit volume Points 1 and 2 must be on the same streamline

  37. Example (text problem 9.50): A nozzle is connected to a horizontal hose. The nozzle shoots out water moving at 25.0 m/s. What is the gauge pressure of the water in the hose? Neglect viscosity and assume that the diameter of the nozzle is much smaller than the inner diameter of the hose. Let point 1 be inside the hose and point 2 be outside the nozzle. The hose is horizontal so y1=y2. Also P2 =Patm.

  38. Example continued: Substituting: v2 = 25m/s and v1 is unknown. Use the continuity equation. Since d2<<d1 it is true that v1<<v2.

  39. Example continued:

  40. §9.9 Viscosity A real fluid has viscosity (fluid friction). This implies a pressure difference needs to be maintained across the ends of a pipe for fluid to flow.

  41. Viscosity also causes the existence of a velocity gradient across a pipe. A fluid flows more rapidly in the center of the pipe and more slowly closer to the walls of the pipe. The volume flow rate for laminar flow of a viscous fluid is given by Poiseuille’s Law. where  is the viscosity

  42. Example (text problem 9.55): A hypodermic syringe attached to a needle has an internal radius of 0.300 mm and a length of 3.00 cm. The needle is filled with a solution of viscosity 2.0010-3 Pa sec; it is injected into a vein at a gauge pressure of 16.0 mm Hg. (a) What must the pressure of the fluid in the syringe be in order to inject the solution at a rate of 0.150 mL/sec? Solve Poiseuille’s Law for the pressure difference:

  43. Example continued: This pressure difference is between the fluid in the syringe and the fluid in the vein; it is the given gauge pressure.

  44. Example continued: (b) What force must be applied to the plunger, which has an area of 1.00 cm2? The result of (a) gives the force per unit area on the plunger so the force is just F = PA = 0.496 N.

  45. §9.10 Viscous Drag The viscous drag force on a sphere is given by Stokes’ law.

  46. y FB FD x w Example (text problem 9.64): A sphere of radius 1.0 cm is dropped into a glass cylinder filled with a viscous liquid. The mass of the sphere is 12.0 g and the density of the liquid is 1200 kg/m3. The sphere reaches a terminal speed of 0.15 m/s. What is the viscosity of the liquid? FBD for sphere Apply Newton’s Second Law to the sphere

  47. Example continued: When v = vterminal, a = 0 and Solving for 

  48. §9.11 Surface Tension The surface of a fluid acts like a a stretched membrane (imagine standing on a trampoline). There is a force along the surface of the fluid. The surface tension is a force per unit length.

  49. Example (text problem 9.70): Assume a water strider has a roughly circular foot of radius 0.02 mm. The water strider has 6 legs. (a) What is the maximum possible upward force on the foot due to the surface tension of the water? The water strider will be able to walk on water if the net upward force exerted by the water equals the weight of the insect. The upward force is supplied by the water’s surface tension.

  50. Example continued: (b) What is the maximum mass of this water strider so that it can keep from breaking through the water surface? To be in equilibrium, each leg must support one-sixth the weight of the insect.

More Related