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Chapter 9 Topics: 9-1 9-2 9-3 9-4 Fluid Mechanics Fluids & Buoyant Force Fluid Pressure & Temperature Fluids in Motion Properties of Gases 1 Fluids A fluid is a non-solid state of matter in which atoms or molecules are free to move past each other; a liquid or a gas Liquids have a definite volume, but an indefinite shape Gases have indefinite volume and shape Density is mass per unit volume D = m/V or ρ =m/V (Where ρ is mass density) Density of gases is measured at certain temperature & pressure – usually 0C & 1atm Temperature & pressure influence gas density Solids & liquids are virtually incompressible, so their densities are pressure-independent Density of water is 1g/mL or 1.0 x 103kg/L or 1.0 x 103kg/m3 2 Buoyancy & Archimedes’Principle The upward force a fluid exerts on objects partially or completely submerged in it – the buoyant force Buoyant force acts in direction opposite gravity Thus objects submerged in water, have a weight less than that when on solid ground; this is called the object’s apparent weight The buoyant force = the weight of the fluid displaced by the object in the fluid Any object placed into a fluid will displace some of the fluid & take its place; it is the weight of that displaced fluid that provides the upward buoyant force on the object 3 Mass, density, buoyancy 4 Buoyancy http://www.youtube.com/wat ch?v=eQsmq3Hu9HA http://www.youtube.com/wat ch?v=vJ36urazDu4 Note apparent decrease in mass of rock 5 Buoyant Force The magnitude of buoyant force = to amount of fluid displaced by the object that is submerged or partially submerged in a fluid FB = Fg = mfg FB = buoyant force Fg = force of displaced fluid mfg = mass of displaced fluid x accel due to gravity mfg is the weight of the displaced fluid The relative densities of substances will determine what floats, what becomes submerged, & what sinks An floating object cannot be denser than the fluid in which it floats For floating objects ρf/ρo = Vo/Vf 6 Altering buoyancy Devices that alter buoyancy change the object’s average density Examples include, life jackets, ballast tanks, ship’s hollow hulls, swim bladders Submarines use ballast tanks to change their depth 7 How organisms use buoyancy Swim bladders inflate to change the overall density of the fish when air is gulped at the surface or gas secreted by a gas gland and the gas goes into the swim bladder; the fish can adjust the gas content to control its diving trim Sharks do not have swim bladders; their liver is huge and lipidrich; they adjust the lipid content to adjust their diving trim Cephalopods (squid, octopus) have no swim bladder; they alter buoyancy and thus diving trim by adjusting body fluids to alter body density; also these organisms can withstand depths which would crush other organisms (they have no swim bladders that would implode, they have not internal bones which would be crushed) Human brain has a density of 1040kg/m3; the cerebro-spinal fluid bathing the brain and spinal cord has a density of 1007kg/m3. This fluid supports the brain with a buoyant force within the cranial cavity. This is why when various spinal tap or other clinical procedures are performed, the brain experiences great stress after the procedure. Patients must stay in prone positions with medical care until the brain fluid volume is restored. 8 Floating objects Buoyant force = object’s weight for floating objects FB = Fg =mog The force of gravity (object’s weight) is in equilibrium with the buoyant force acting against the Fg Since the 2 forces are equal and opposite, the object floats at the surface of the fluid 9 Submerged objects If the 2 forces are not in equilibrium & the densities differ, the object will become submerged The degree of submergence depends on the FB (buoyant force upwards) and apparent weight of object (downwards) Fg/FB = ρo/ρf This equation is used to solve buoyancy problems 10 Pressure & Temperature Pressure = force/area P=F/A unit is N/m2 Atmospheres (atm) Millimeter of mercury (mmHg) Pounds per square inch (lb/in2) 105 Pa or 105 N/m2 1 atm 101 mmHg 14.8 lb/in2 A N/m2 is also called a Pascal (Pa) Pressure can also be measured in: At sea level atmospheric pressure is: For each 33 feet an object is submerged in the ocean, they experience an additional 1 atm of pressure http://www.madsci.org/posts/archives/1998-11/912136521.Ph.r.html If you have that much pressure on you at this instant at sea level, how is it that you feel no pressure difficulties? 11 Fluids exert pressure Fluids exert force equally in all directions when inside an object Pascal’s Principle P 1 = P2 F1/A1 = F2/A2 This relationship is useful to understand how pressure, force, & area are related Consider how a barber chair works Little Louie steps on a small lever at the base of the chair (applying a small force) which raises Big Bubba in the chair. How does a small force applied by Louie’s foot raise massive Bubba in the barber chair? 12 Hydraulic devices utilize Pascal’s Principle! Remember fluids exert pressure in all directions equally So, how much force does Little Louie have to apply to a 0.004m2 piston which applies the pressure throughout the liquid to push the second piston which lifts Big Bubba in the chair? FLL = ?N ALL = 0.004m2 FBB = 780N ABB= 0.5m2 F1/A1 = F2/A2 x/0.004 = 780/0.5 X = 780 x 0.004/0.5 = 6.24N Little Louie needs to apply a mere 6.24N to lift Big Bubba’s 780N body in the barber chair! 13 A natural hydraulic system 14 Man-made hydraulic system (to make jobs easier) 15 Equations for Pressure (P) that varies with depth As objects go deeper into the water, the pressure increases with depth; the weight (Fg) of column of H2O above the object exerts a force on the object The H2O column has a volume = Ah, where A = cross-section area of column; h = height of column So mass of the H2O column is: m = ρV =ρAh These relationships can be arranged in the following sets of equalities for equations to use in solutions for pressure problems: P=F/A=mg/A=ρVg/A=ρAhg/A=ρhg This is called “guage pressure” b/c it represents the force on the object by the column of H2O only What is absolute pressure? 16 Absolute pressure takes into account the air pressure above the column of H2O above the obejct Fluid pressure is a function of depth P = Po + ρgh; where Po = atmos P Temperature is an important quality of fluids; the kinetic theory helps explain molecular movement of particles which have a direct influence on pressure; changes in temperature affect particle movement Absolute zero describes the instance where all molecular movement theoretically ceases; 0 Kelvin. 17 Some good video links for fluid topics Video about pressure on an egg: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4uRnPTQxZtw Video on Pascal’s Principle Part 1: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dIjAFW02PBM&feature= related Video on Pascal’s Principle Part 2: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Skran9E_Cjk&feat ure=related Video on atomspheric pressure: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0fy4TLMNb6s&feature=r elated 18 Atmospheric Pressure & Temperature The pressure of the atmosphere exerts pressure on the atmospheric layers below At sea level, atmospheric pressure is about 14.8lb/in2 or 1 atm slide 11) (see Humans: 2m2 body surface area; so atmospheric force on our bodies ~200,000N (40,000lbs) Why do we not collapse or feel this force? Temperature – a measure of the average kinetic energy of the particles in a substance Measure of how hot or cold a substance is; measured using a thermometer The higher the energy content of the particles, the higher the temperature of the substance Consider the phase change diagrams of substances to help you visualize this connection Temperature scales: Fahrenheit: 32F water freezes; 212F water evaporates Celsius: 0C water freezes; 100C water evaporates Kelvin: 273K water freezes; 373K water evaporates (add 273 to Celsius temp to get Kelvin temp; NO degree symbol used for Kelvin) 19 Fluids in Motion Bernoulli’s Equation Ideal fluids Fluids in motion are real fluids, but we will consider the fluids in our discussion as ideal fluids Conservation laws apply to moving fluids; when considering fluids moving through a pipe, then the mass of fluid entering the pipe during a certain interval must equal the mass of the fluid exiting the pipe during the same interval 1)incompressible (density remains same) 2)non-viscous (internal friction is zero) 3)have steady flow (velocity, pressure, density at each point in fluid remain same) 4)non-turbulent flow (no angular speed, ie eddy currents, in moving fluid) A1v1 = A2v2 So, as a fluid moves faster its pressure decreases Look at diagrams on next slide 20 Note how as fluid speed changes, its pressure changes; in what natural instances would you notice this? 21 Bernoulli’s Principle provides insight as to why airplanes fly… B A Air hitting wing front (A) splits its stream; top stream must arrive at wing end (B) at same time the bottom stream does; thus air speeds differ from top to bottom; thus pressure differs & providing sufficient lift for plane! 22 23 Bernoulli’s Equation Compares the energy of a fluid between 2 points: P1 + ½ ρv12 + ρgh1 = P2 + ½ ρv22 + ρgh2 If fluid movement thru a pipe is at same height, then the gravitational potential energy would not change; the ρgh now is removed from the equation 24 Ideal Gas Law PV = NkBT P = pressure (unit = atm) V = volume (unit = L) N = # particles kB = Boltzmann’s constant = 1.38X10-23 J/K T = temperature (unit = K) Real gases act like ideal gases under normal conditions; so we can apply the ideal gas law to real gases Note: in chemistry this law is written: PV = nRT Where n is #moles; R is gas constant (8.31 J/molK) 25