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Chapter 9

Chapter 9. Solids and Fluids (c). EXAMPLE. A small swimming pool has an area of 10 square meters. A wooden 4000-kg statue of density 500 kg/m 3 is then floated on top of the pool. How far does the water rise? Note: Density of water = 1000 kg/m 3. Solution.

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Chapter 9

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  1. Chapter 9 Solids and Fluids (c)

  2. EXAMPLE A small swimming pool has an area of 10 square meters. A wooden 4000-kg statue of density 500 kg/m3 is then floated on top of the pool. How far does the water rise? Note: Density of water = 1000 kg/m3

  3. Solution Given: rwood/rH20 = 0.5, A = 10 m2, M = 4000 kg Find: h h Level is the same as if 4000 kg of water were added = 4 m3 Consider problem: A volume V = 4 m3 of water is added to a swimming pool. What is h? = 40 cm

  4. Quiz 1. What is your section number? 2. Three objects rest on bathroom scales at a lake bottom. Object 1 is a lead brick of volume 0.2 m3 Object 2 is a gold brick of volume 0.2 m3 Object 3 is a lead brick of volume 0.1 m3 DATA: specific gravity of lead = 11.3 specific gravity of gold = 19.3 specific gravity of mercury = 13.6 Which statement is true? a) #1 and #2 have the same buoyant force b) #1 and #2 register the same weights on the scales c) #1 and #3 have the same buoyant force d) #1 and #3 register the same weights on the scales e) If the lake were filled with mercury, the scales would not change.

  5. Equation of Continuity What goes in must come out! mass density Mass that passes a pointin pipe during time Dt

  6. Example Water flows through a 4.0 cm diameter pipe at 5 cm/s. The pipe then narrows downstream and has a diameter of of 2.0 cm. What is the velocity of the water through the smaller pipe? Solution = 20 cm/s

  7. Laminar Flow and Turbulence • Laminar or Streamline Flow: • Fluid elements move along smooth paths that don’t cross • Friction in laminar flow is called viscosity • Turbulent flow • Irregular paths • Sets in for high gradients (large velocities or small pipes)

  8. Ideal Fluids • Laminar Flow • No turbulence • Non-viscous • No friction between fluid layers • Incompressible • Density is same everywhere

  9. Bernoulli’s Equation Physical content: the sum of the pressure, kinetic energy per unit volume, and the potential energy per unit volume has the same value at all points along a streamline. How can we derive this?

  10. All together now: With We get: Bernoulli’s Equation: derivation Physical basis: Work-energy relation

  11. Example: Venturi Meter • A very large pipe carries water with a very slow velocity and empties into a small pipe with a high velocity. If P2 is 7000 Pa lower than P1, what is the velocity of the water in the small pipe?

  12. Solution Given: DP = 7000 Pa, r = 1000 kg/m3 Find: v v = 3.74 m/s

  13. Applications of Bernoulli’s Equation • Venturi meter • Curve balls • Airplanes Beach Ball Demo

  14. a b Example Water drains out of the bottom of a cooler at 3 m/s, what is the depth of the water above the valve? Solution Compare water at top(a) of cooler with water leaving valve(b). = 45.9 cm

  15. Three Vocabulary Words • Viscosity • Diffusion • Osmosis

  16. Viscosity • Viscosity refers to friction between the layers • Pressure drop required to force water through pipes(Poiselle’s Law) • At high enough velocity, turbulence sets in

  17. Diffusion • Molecules move from region of high concentration to region of low concentration • Fick’s Law: • D = diffusion coefficient

  18. Osmosis • Osmosis is the movement of water through a boundary while denying passage to specific molecules, e.g. salts

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