Q1. A solid cylindrical needle of diameter d, length L, and density ρn may "float" on a liquid
Q1. A solid cylindrical needle of diameter d, length L, and density ρn may "float" on a liquid
Q1. A solid cylindrical needle of diameter d, length L, and density ρn may "float" on a liquid
Q1. A solid cylindrical needle of diameter d, length L, and density ρn may “float” on a liquid
surface. Neglect buoyancy and assume a contact angle of 0 degree. Calculate the maxi-mum
diameter needle able to float on the surface.
Solution: The needle “dents” the surface downward and the surface tension forces are
upward, as shown. If these tensions are nearly vertical, a vertical force balance gives:
p 8Y
å Fz = 0 = 2YL - rg d2 L, or: d max » Ans. (a)
4 prg
10 points
Q2. In Figure, the tank contains water and immiscible oil at 20C. What is h in centimeters if
the density of the oil and water is 898 kg/m3 998 kg/m3 respectively.
Solution: For water take the density = 998 kg/m3. Apply the hydrostatic relation from
the oil surface to the water surface, skipping the 8-cm part:
10 points
Chapter 2 • Pressure Distribution in a Fluid 2-2
Q3. Gate AB in Figure is 1.2 m long and 0.8 m into the paper. Neglecting atmospheric-pressure
effects, compute the force F on the gate and its center of pressure position X.
5 points
5 points
Q4. Compute the horizontal and vertical components of the hydrostatic force on the
quartercircle panel at the bottom of the water tank in Fig. P2.85. Note that γwater is 9790 N/m3 .
1.
Chapter 2 • Pressure Distribution in a Fluid 2-3
Fig. P2.82
Solution: The horizontal force acts as if the dam were vertical and 20 m high:
FH = g h CG A vert
= (9790 N/m 3 )(10 m)(20 ´ 50 m 2 )
= 97.9 MN Ans.
5 points
This force acts 2/3 of the way down or 13.33 m from the surface, as in the figure. The
vertical force is the weight of the fluid above the dam:
p
FV = g (Vol)dam = (9790 N/m3 ) (20 m)2 (50 m) = 153.8 MN Ans.
4
This vertical component acts through the centroid of the water above the dam, or 4R/3p =
4(20 m)/3p = 8.49 m to the right of point A, as shown in the figure. The resultant hydrostatic
force is F = [(97.9 MN)2 + (153.8 MN)2]1/2 = 182.3 MN acting down at an angle of 32.5°
from the vertical. The line of action of F strikes the circular-arc dam AB at the center of
pressure CP, which is 10.74 m to the right and 3.13 m up from point A, as shown in the
figure. Ans.
5 points
2. -
Chapter 2 • Pressure Distribution in a Fluid 2-4
5 points
The vertical component is the weight of the fluid above the quarter-circle panel:
Q5. The tank of liquid in the figure accelerates to the right with the fluid in rigid-body motion.
(a) Compute ax in m/s2 . (b) Why doesn’t the solution to part (a) depend upon fluid density? (c)
Compute gage pressure at point A if the fluid is glycerin at 20 C.
ax 28 - 15 cm
tanq = = = 0.13, or: q = 7.4°
g 100 cm
thus ax = 0.13g = 0.13(9.81) = 1.28 m/s2 Ans. (a)
5 points
(b) Clearly, the solution to (a) is purely geometric and does not involve fluid density. Ans. (b)
Chapter 2 • Pressure Distribution in a Fluid 2-5
5 points
(c) From Table A-3 for glycerin, r = 1260 kg/m3. There are many ways to compute pA. For
example, we can go straight down on the left side, using only gravity:
pA = r gDz = (1260 kg/m3 )(9.81 m/s2 )(0.28 m) = 3460 Pa (gage) Ans. (c)
Or we can start on the right side, go down 15 cm with g and across 100 cm with ax:
5 points
Q6. The tank of water in Figure is 12 cm wide into the paper. If the tank is accelerated to the
right in rigid-body motion at 6 m/s2, compute (a) the water depth at AB, and (b) the water force
on panel AB.
5 points
The water pressure on AB varies linearly due to gravity only, thus the water force is
æ 0.163 ö
FAB = pCG A AB = (9790)ç m ÷ (0.163 m)(0.12 m) » 15.7 N Ans. (b)
è 2 ø
5 points