* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Mass Flow
Classical mechanics wikipedia , lookup
Fictitious force wikipedia , lookup
Newton's theorem of revolving orbits wikipedia , lookup
Fluid dynamics wikipedia , lookup
Modified Newtonian dynamics wikipedia , lookup
Centrifugal force wikipedia , lookup
Centripetal force wikipedia , lookup
Electromagnetic mass wikipedia , lookup
Hooke's law wikipedia , lookup
Seismometer wikipedia , lookup
Classical central-force problem wikipedia , lookup
Relativistic mechanics wikipedia , lookup
Rigid body dynamics wikipedia , lookup
Mass and Force EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Agenda • Mass – – – – – Mass Density Mass Flow Mass Moment of Inertia Momentum • Force – – – – – Force basics and applications Spring forces Friction forces Newton’s laws Pressure EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Mass • SI unit kg • Weight is a force, unit N • Mass is involved in multiple engineering principles! What is the mass of your calculator? How about its weight on Earth? And on Mars? EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Agenda • Mass – – – – – Mass Density Mass Flow Mass Moment of Inertia Momentum • Force – – – – – Force basics and applications Spring forces Friction forces Newton’s laws Pressure EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Density • Density=mass/volume • • m V SI units Kg/m3 US units slugs/ft3 [ρ] = M/L3 • Important in e.g. material selection • Note: Density can change due to e.g. temperature and pressure Which one of these three materials would you choose for a part (size 0.001m3) of an airplane interior decor? How about as a counter weight for an elevator? Material Wood (oak) Density (kg/m3) 750 Cement 1920 Aluminum 2740 EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Lava Lamp Example How does the lava lamp work? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DL3Ez9bxMTo&feature=related EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Agenda • Mass – – – – – Mass Density Mass Flow Mass Moment of Inertia Momentum • Force – – – – – Force basics and applications Spring forces Friction forces Newton’s laws Pressure EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Mass Flow • Mass flow = mass/time • m’ = dm/dt = Δm/Δt • m’ units Kg/sec (SI) slugs/sec (US) • Volume flow = volume/time • V’ = dV/dt = ΔV/Δt • V’ units m3/sec ft3/sec • m’ = dm/dt = ρdV/dt = ρV’ EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 • M’ m’ • V’ v’ • For an incompressible fluid, M’ = m’ • V’ = v’ • Therefore velocity is greater in narrow pipe and slower in fat pipe. EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Volume or mass flow? • Depends on application • Volume flow preferred – when filling a tank of a specific volume with liquids of different densities – when a process can accept only a limited volume at a time • Mass flow preferred – in chemical reactions, where the number of reactant molecules (mass) is important – when measuring gas flow – When goods sold based on weight EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Mass Flow - Task Estimate the mass flow of a gas pump. Density of regular gasoline is 720 kg/m3. EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Agenda • Mass – – – – – Mass Density Mass Flow Mass Moment of Inertia Momentum • Force – – – – – Force basics and applications Spring forces Friction forces Newton’s laws Pressure EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Mass Moment of Inertia • Measure of how hard it is to rotate something with respect to the center of rotation, or resistance to rate of change of rotation • For a single mass particle: I z z r 2 m • For a system of mass 2 particles: I z z ri mi z-axes r m m2 r2 i EGR 102 03/24/2009 I z z r 2 dm © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Mass moment of inertia - example z-axis R=5 cm h1=30 cm Which one of the following object is harder to rotate around the z-axes? Both are made of steel (=7860 kg/m3). h1=4 cm Ø=20 cm EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 How are these related to mass moment of inertia? flywheel EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Agenda • Mass – – – – – Mass Density Mass Flow Mass Moment of Inertia Momentum • Force – – – – – Force basics and applications Spring forces Friction forces Newton’s laws Pressure EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Momentum • Momentum p (or L) • p = mv L = mv • Momentum is directional Velocity (a component of momentum) is directional EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Momentum - Example www.aerospaceweb.org/question/investigations/columbia/foam-impact.jpg Investigators into the Columbia accident have estimated that the dislodged foam was about 48 x 29 x 14 cm (19 x 11.5 x 5.5 in) , weighed about 0.75 kg (1.7 lb) and impacted the Shuttle at nearly 850 km/h (530 mph). For the sake of a rough comparison, this block of foam would be about the same size and weight as a large loaf of bread. (www.aerospaceweb.org/question/investigations/q0131.shtml) p (or L) = mv = 0.75kg * 850,000m/3600s = 177 kg m/s Same momentum as a 5 kg (11 lb) brick hitting you driving 127.5km/h (80mph) ! EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Momentum - Task Which has greater momentum? A)An Olympic 100m runner at speed 10 m/s B)A 1000kg car pulling out of a parking lot at 2 km/h EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Mass and Weight • Mass - scalar (SI unit kg) • Weight – vector, it’s force (SI unit N) EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Agenda • Mass – – – – – Mass Density Mass Flow Mass Moment of Inertia Momentum • Force – – – – – Force basics and applications Spring forces Friction forces Newton’s laws Pressure EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Basics • Force is the interaction of two objects, typically one pushes or pulls the other – Direct contact: you pulling a door open – No direct contact: gravity pulling you toward the center of the earth • Force causes objects to move, lengthen, shorten, twist, bend, etc. • SI Unit: Newton [F]=N – F=ma N=kg·m/s2 • U.S. Customary unit: pound force lbf – F=ma lbf = 1slug·ft/s2 (1lbf=4.448 N) EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Applications EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Force is a vector quantity(on whiteboard) F1 EGR 102 03/24/2009 F2 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Agenda • Mass – – – – – Mass Density Mass Flow Mass Moment of Inertia Momentum • Force – – – – – Force basics and applications Spring forces Friction forces Newton’s laws Pressure EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Spring Forces • Springs widely used in engineering – Store energy – Return to original position – Dampen vibration www.motorsportscenter.com/uploads/suspension.jpg • Spring types: – Linear, torsional www.pleasanthillgrain.com/bag_clip_bag_clips_stainless.asp www.pharma-pen.com http://rclsgi.eng.ohio-state.edu/~gnwashin/me481/mech_sys.html EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Hooke’s law F kx F = applied force (N) k = spring constant (N/mm, N/m) x = deformation of the spring (mm, m) • Applicable in the elastic range of the spring – Elastic means there is no permanent deformation after the force is removed x EGR 102 03/24/2009 F © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Whiteboard example • A compression spring is 10 cm long when no force is applied. When a force is applied, the deformed length is 8 cm. The spring has a spring constant of 10 N/m. Calculated the applied force. EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Determining the spring constant F kx F = applied force (N) k = spring constant (N/mm, N/m) x = deformation of the spring (mm, m) • In-class task: determine the spring constant of one of the scales in the back of the room • Plot your data in Excel, explain all the steps you take • Prepare to present in front of the class • See EF example 10.1 for help EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Homework and Teardown • Homework – due Thursday 04/01 before the class – From the course book: 9.5 (10p), 9.6 (less than 1 page typed)(20p), 9.12 (10p), and 9.23 (10p) • Look for (broken) products to take apart later – good product will replace one bad assignment grade – Bring products early! EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Agenda • Mass – – – – – Mass Density Mass Flow Mass Moment of Inertia Momentum • Force – – – – – Force basics and applications Spring forces Friction forces Newton’s laws Pressure EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Friction Forces • “Frictionless” systems, commonly used in physics, do not really exist • Friction can be useful • Types of friction: – Dry friction www.garageboy.com F friction N • Static friction • Dynamic (kinetic) friction – Viscous friction (fluid friction) EGR 102 03/24/2009 www.respo.net/respo_school/respo_school_006/pics /pour_oil_01.jpg © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Friction force (N) Applied force and friction Maximum static friction force Dynamic friction force Applied force (N) EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Whiteboard Example • The static coefficient of friction between an object and a horizontal surface is 0.85. The object’s mass is 0.550 kg. If the object is pushed on the surface (force horizontal) of 5N, will the object move? EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Friction In-Class Task How would you calculate the static coefficient of friction of your calculator starting to slide on your course book? EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Agenda • Mass – – – – – Mass Density Mass Flow Mass Moment of Inertia Momentum • Force – – – – – Force basics and applications Spring forces Friction forces Newton’s laws Pressure EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Free body diagrams • Free body diagram shows all external forces acting on the body. • Commonly used in statics, dynamics, and mechanics of materials • Steps to draw the free body diagram – Make a simplified drawing of the body in question – Draw all force vectors acting on it • Do not forget weight, unless gravitational forces are ignored – Label all forces – Define fore coordinate system EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Practice (white board) • Steps to draw the free body diagram – Make a simplified drawing of the body in question – Draw all force vectors acting on it • Do not forget weight, unless gravitational forces are ignored – Label all forces – Define fore coordinate system EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 In-class task • Draw a free body diagram for the two pipes in a v-shaped channel. 40 EGR 102 03/24/2009 20 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Newton’s Laws I. Every object in a state of uniform motion tends to remain in that state of motion unless an external force is applied to it F ma II. III. For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Newton’s Laws I. Every object in a state of uniform motion tends to remain in that state of motion unless an external force is applied to it This also applies Remember what happened to the cannon ball in both x and y-directions? 11m v0 a to an object in rest – they will not move unless acted upon by an unbalanced force vy0 vx0 1.5m a EGR 102 03/24/2009 100m © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Newton’s Laws d v II. F ma , F m dt a I. Notice the relation between the magnitudes and directions of F and a! m EGR 102 03/24/2009 F © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Newton’s Laws d v II. F ma , F m dt a F2 I. m F1 F F1 F2 ma EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Newton’s Laws I. II. S s III. For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction N N mg N mg m mg EGR 102 03/24/2009 Both the magnitude and direction of the two forces are equal Why are the absolute value signs on N and g, not mg or m? © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Force Basics - revisited • Force is the interaction of two objects, typically one pushes or pulls the other – Direct contact: you pulling a door (from the handle) open the door pulling the handle so it does not come off – No direct contact: gravity pulling you toward the center of the earth the surface of the earth (pavement?) pushing you so you do not sink in the earth EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Team Assignment – Due Tue 4/7 8:00 am • Problem/Design project: – Design a mass-spring system that can be taken to Mars to measure the acceleration due to gravity at the surface of Mars. • Explain the basis of your design – The governing equations & law’s of physics and how they relate to your design – Decisions on materials, components, attachment methods or working principle – Decisions that relate to the ability to take it to Mars • Include a drawing of your design – Include rough dimensions – Include a parts list. The level of detail can be “spring, glue, screw, metal plate”, so no need to find the actual part numbers and exact materials for the components. • Explain how your design should be calibrated and used • No need to build the system. • Hand in a report including equations and figures. The length can be anything from 2-4 pages typed. The length will not be graded. Only content is graded. Max 50p. EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Assignment • Individual assignment (=homework) • Due Thu 4/9 8:00am • Problems: – 10.11, 10.15, 10.19, 10.21, 10.22 (10p each) • Follow format in course book EF chapter 4 EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Reminders • Look for (broken) products to take apart later – good product will replace one bad assignment grade EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Agenda • Mass – – – – – Mass Density Mass Flow Mass Moment of Inertia Momentum • Force – – – – – Force basics and applications Spring forces Friction forces Newton’s laws Pressure EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Newton’s Law - Application • Equilibrium of forces and moments F 0 x ,i F y ,i M 0 i i O ,i 0 i System: F Free Body Diagram: F FA FBY FBX If F is 50N, what is FA+ FB, why? EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Whiteboard example F 3i 4 j System: j i EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Whiteboard example 2 You are pushing a lawn mower with force of 703N. The lawn mower weighs 30 kg. The mower is not moving in the y-direction. What is the acceleration of the mower on the grass? The friction coefficient between the wheels and the grass is 0.60. At what angle should you push to maximize the acceleration? What is a reasonable angle if you were to redesign the mower? F N y 45° F EGR 102 03/24/2009 mg x © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Agenda • Mass – – – – – Mass Density Mass Flow Mass Moment of Inertia Momentum • Force – – – – – Force basics and applications Spring forces Friction forces Newton’s laws Pressure EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Pressure F • Pressure: Force acting over an area p A F N 2 Pa • SI unit Pascal: p A m F lb f 2 psi • US customary unit: p A in • Pressure analogous to stress s F s A EGR 102 03/24/2009 F=mg A1=pr12 F=mg A2=pr22 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Pressure in Engineering • Pressure and stress • Hydrostatics • Hydrodynamics • Hydraulics/Pneumatics AP • Aerodynamics www.howstuffworks.com EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Pressure - Fluids • Pascal’s law: for fluid at rest, pressure at a point is the same in all directions. • For a fluid at rest, pressure increases with the depth of fluid: p gh h kg m kg m 1 N p g h 3 2 m 2 2 2 Pa m s s m m EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Pressure - Air • Analogous to fluids • Atmospheric pressure 101.325 kPa (14.696 psi) – Based on the weight of air in the atmosphere above the surface of the earth divided by the area at the base of the column h1 EGR 102 03/24/2009 h2 h h © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Measuring Pressure • Absolute pressure vs gauge pressure pabsolute p gauge patmosphere EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Pressure Application • Hydraulic systems F1 F2 p1 F1 A1 F p2 2 A2 www.immersivetechnologies.com/Images/machine/cat5130.jpg F1 F2 A2 p1 p2 F2 F1 A1 A2 A1 EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Hydraulic system – whiteboard example F2 F1 EGR 102 03/24/2009 r1 = 1 cm r2 = 3 cm F1 = 10 N F2 = ? © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Example (whiteboard) How much force (F1) do you need to apply to compress the spring by 5.00cm? F1 Rigid beam A1 A2 = 20.0 A1 F1 = ? k=3000.0 N/m x=5.00 cm EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Agenda • Mass – – – – – Mass Density Mass Flow Mass Moment of Inertia Momentum • Force – – – – – Force basics and applications Spring forces Friction forces Newton’s laws Pressure EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Hooke’s law - revisited F kx F = applied force (N) k = spring constant (N/mm, N/m) x = deformation of the spring (mm, m) • Applicable in the elastic range of the spring – Elastic means there is no permanent deformation after the force is removed x EGR 102 03/24/2009 F © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Hooke’s law cont’d F kx F = applied force k = a constant x = deformation • Applicable in the elastic range of the material – Elastic means there is no permanent deformation after the force is removed Elastic stress is not typically visible x EGR 102 03/24/2009 F © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Stress-Strain curve Remember: Hooke’s law valid in “elastic range” Elastic stress Stress (Pa) Ultimate stress Upper yield stress Lower yield stress Fracture stress Modulus of Elasticity E L s E L Hooke’s law restated: s E EGR 102 03/24/2009 Strain (mm/mm) © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Modulus of Elasticity & Shear Modulus • Material property • Modulus of elasticity, E, for linear pulling (or pushing) of material • Shear modulus for shearing or twisting material EGR 102 03/24/2009 F F F F F F © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Tensile Strength & Compressive Strength • Tensile strength is the stress when a material is pulled apart – Yield strength in the elastic region (commonly used in engineering) – Ultimate stress in the maximum stress material can handle before failure • Compressive strength is the stress when a material is compressed EGR 102 03/24/2009 F F F F F © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Modulus of elasticity of materials EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Stress (Pa) Stress (Pa) Stress-Strain curve Brittle and Ductile material Strain (mm/mm) EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Strength of materials • When designing a piece, it is typically designed to withstand loads to its yield stress + a factor of safety EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Example (whiteboard) • A rod is pulled in a tensile testing machine with force 50.0 kN. The rod has a diameter of 4.0 cm. The stain is 0.00001 What material could the rod be? Hooke’s law restated: s E EGR 102 03/24/2009 Modulus of Elasticity E L s E L © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Replacing an engine - problem Supporting cable 10° ring, not a pulley 80° Engine EGR 102 03/24/2009 You are replacing an engine in your car using a rope as shown in figure. How much force do you need to lift the engine? What is the tension force on the supporting cable? Choose a rope diameter to accommodate the largest stress. Use a reasonable factor of safety. The tensile strength of the rope is 42 MPa. The engine weighs 321 kg. To solve, draw a free body diagram, make the sum of forces (as vectors or as components) add to 0 (equilibrium), and solve for unknown forces. From forces, calculate the needed diameter for the worst case. Mathematical answer for diameter is 1.0 cm, what is your engineering answer? © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Reminders • Look for (broken) products to take apart later – good product will replace one bad assignment grade EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Agenda • • • • • • • • • Force basics and applications Spring forces Friction forces Free body diagrams Newton’s laws Pressure Stress and strain Moments Work EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Moment • Moment is force acting at a distance M Fd M F d Nm F EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Moment & Torque in Engineering http://eml.ou.edu/Photo/Struct/Traffic%20light2.jpg www.craneoperator.com http://content.answers.com/main/content/wp/en/thumb/b /b4/500px-The_Little_Belt_Bridge_(1935).jpeg www.mech.uwa.edu.au/DANotes/ge ars/intro/gearbox.jpeg EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Calculating moments 1. Draw a free body diagram 2. Write the force and moment equilibrium equations 3. Solve for unknowns EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Moment – Example 1 F System: L/2 L Free Body Diagram: F FBx FA FBy 1. 2. EGR 102 03/24/2009 3. Draw a free body diagram Write the force and moment equilibrium equations Solve for unknowns © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Moment – Example 2 F System: L/2 L Free Body Diagram: M FAx F FAy 1. 2. EGR 102 03/24/2009 3. Draw a free body diagram Write the force and moment equilibrium equations Solve for unknowns © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Moment – Example 3 • EF problem 10.25 1. 2. EGR 102 03/24/2009 3. Draw a free body diagram Write the force and moment equilibrium equations Solve for unknowns © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Moment – in class task L/4 Calculate the forces and moments in terms on given mi , L, and g. L/8 L/2 1. 2. 3. m1g m2g L M EGR 102 03/24/2009 L FAx FAy Draw a free body diagram Write the force and moment equilibrium equations Solve for unknowns © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Agenda • • • • • • • • • Force basics and applications Spring forces Friction forces Free body diagrams Newton’s laws Pressure Stress and strain Moments Work EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Work • Work is the force to the direction of the movement need to move an item W Fd W F d F Fwork W F d Nm J F Fwork d EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Work in Engineering mowabb.com/aimages/images/2005/07-15-05.jpg www.mhinfo.com/mhi_new/images/conve yor.jpg EGR 102 03/24/2009 www.otis.com © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Work - Example • How much work is required to push a lawn mower for 100m? How much force do you need to push the mower? F=200N. Pushing angle is 60°. F N Fy 60° Fwork F EGR 102 03/24/2009 mg © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Work - Example • How much work is required to push a lawn mower for 100m? F =200i+231j N mg EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Work – In class task • How much work is required to push w/ force F the crate 1m down the ramp at constant speed. Friction force is 800N. The crate weighs 100 kg. mg EGR 102 03/24/2009 40 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 Assignment • Individual assignment (=homework) • Due Thu 4/16 8:00am • Problems: – 10.23, 10.24, 10.27, + the pulley problem on the next slide (10p for each problem in EF + 20p for the pulley problem) • Follow format in course book EF chapter 4 EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 • A pulley is hanging on 2 cables on the ceiling. You are pulling a known mass on a rope as shown in the figure. What percentage of the effort (force) you use goes to work done to lift the mass? Which rope/cable is under most stress? 40 30 Cable A Cable B 25 Rope m EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009 40 TAy 40 TA TB TAx 30 30 TBy TBx 25 G Fpull_y Fpull_x EGR 102 03/24/2009 © Katja Hölttä-Otto 2009