Fluids Fluids
Fluids Fluids
Fluids Fluids
Elasticity
Pressure, specific gravity, density
Archimedes Principle
Bernoullis Equation
States of Matter
Solid
Liquid
Gas
Plasmas
A fluid, in contrast to a solid, is a substance
that can flow.
L
Strain L
L A
dimensionless
L
Strain is a unitless
quantity
Elastic Modulus
stress
Elastic modulus = strain
Y
F
A L
L L tensile strain
A
Robert Hooke
L
Measure of stiffness
Tensile refers to tension
Youngs Modulus equation
F = Y(L) or Y= F/A
A L L/L
L = (FL) 1 or L 1
(A) Y Y
Sample problem
1.97 m
Shear Modulus
Sheer Stress
S
F
A
x h
X is the relative displacement
of the faces
Sheer Strain
h is the distance between them
Sometime called as
modulus of rigidity
For solids and liquids Bulk Modulus
( incompressible )
F P Change in Pressure
B A
V
V
V
V Volume Strain
BY 3
F 1 Pa = 1 N/m2
P
A
F = p water X Area
= 784000 N/ sq.m x 0.300m
= 23520N
Density and Pressure
V
Density and Specific Gravity
19,300 kg
42549 lbs
Pressure & Pascals Principle
F
P Pressure applied to any part of
A
an enclosed fluid is transmitted
undimished to every point of the
fluid and to the walls of the
container
A2
F2 F1
A1
Examples: hydraulic brakes,
forklifts, car lifts, etc.
Pressure and Depth
w is weight
w Mg Vg Ahg
Factor A
P P0 gh
Example 4
Find the pressure at 10,000 m of water.
DATA: Atmospheric pressure = 1.015x105 Pa.
9.82x107 Pa
Example 5
27.2 m
Example 6
Estimate the mass of the Earths atmosphere given
that atmospheric pressure is 1.015x105 Pa.
Data: Rearth=6.36x106 m
5.26x1018 kg
Archimedes Principle
Any object completely or partially submerged in a fluid
is buoyed up by a force whose magnitude is equal to
the weight of the fluid displaced by the object.
Fb = mf g (b Fb = mf g (buoyant
force),
1401 N
Example 8a
A wooden ball of mass M and volume V floats on a
swimming pool. The density of the wood is wood < H20.
The buoyant force acting on the ball is:
a) Mg upward
b) H20gV upward
c) ( H20- wood)gV upward
Example 8b
A steel ball of mass M and volume V rests on the
bottom of a swimming pool. The density of the steel
is steel > H20. The buoyant force acting on the ball is:
a) Mg upward
b) H20gV upward
c) ( steel- H20)gV upward
Example 8 c
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?
40 cm
Floating Coke Demo
The can will
a) Float
b) Sink
Paint Thinner Demo
When I pour in the paint thinner, the cylinder will:
a) Rise
b) Fall
Equation of Continuity
What goes in must come out!
mass density
M Ax Avt
Eq.ofContinuity
1 A1v1 2 A2 v2
Ideal Fluids in Motion
Realistic fluids are complicated. We usually study ideal
fluids as a model to obtain many useful results. An ideal
fluid is a fluid with the following four assumptions:
1. Steady flow: In steady (or laminar) flow, the velocity of the
moving fluid at any fixed point does not change with time.
(incompressible fluids )
20 cm/s
Laminar or Streamline Flow
1 2
P v gy constant
2
Sum of P, KE/V and PE/V is constant
Therefore,
Finally,
Example 10
3.74 m/s
Applications of Bernoullis Equation
Venturi meter
Curve balls
Airplanes
1 ____ 2
a) =
b) <
c) >
Example 11b
v1 ____ v2
a) =
b) <
c) >
Example 11d
P1 ____ P2
a) =
b) <
c) >
Example 12 a
Water drains out of the bottom of a
cooler at 3 m/s, what is the depth of
the water above the valve? b
45.9 cm
Three Vocabulary Words
Viscosity
Diffusion
Osmosis
Viscosity
v
F A
d
D = diffusion
coefficient
Osmosis
Movement of water through a boundary while
denying passage to specific molecules, e.g.
salts