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Fluids: Bernoulli's Principle

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Fluids

States of Matter Bernoulli’s Principle


Phase Changes Torricelli’s principle
Density Viscosity
Pressure
Turbulence
Pascal’s Principle
Cohesion
Buoyant Force
Archimedes’ Principle
Adhesion
Surface Tension
States of Matter
Matter comes in a variety of states: solid, liquid, gas, and plasma.
• The molecules of solid are locked in a rigid structure and can only
vibrate. (Add thermal energy and the vibrations increase.) Some
solids are crystalline, like table salt, in which the atoms are arranged
in a repeating pattern. Some solids are amorphous, like glass, in
which the atoms have no orderly arrangement. Either way, a solid
has definite volume and shape.
• A liquid is virtually incompressible and has definite volume but no
definite shape. (If you pour a liter of juice into several glasses, the
shape of the juice has changed but the total volume hasn’t.)
• A gas is easily compressed. It has neither definite shape nor definite
volume. (If a container of CO2 is opened, it will diffuse throughout
the room.)
• A plasma is an ionized gas and is the most common form of matter
in the universe, since the insides of stars are plasmas.
Phase Changes
Evaporation: Liquid → Gas
Condensation: Gas → Liquid
Melting: Solid → Liquid
Freezing: Liquid → Solid
Sublimation: Solid → Gas

A volatile liquid is one that evaporates quickly.


Examples of sublimation: Dry ice (frozen CO2) goes directly from
the solid to the gaseous state (it sublimates). This creates an eerie,
old fashioned effect, like graveyard fog in a spooky, old monster
movie. Comets are very small objects containing frozen gases that
sublimate when the comet get close enough to the sun. This creates
the characteristic tail the can be millions of miles long.
Fluids
The term fluid refers to gases and liquids. Gases and
liquids have more in common with each other than they
do with solids, since gases and liquids both have atoms/
molecules that are free to move around. They are not
locked in place as they are in a solid. The hotter the fluid,
the faster its molecules move on average, and the more
space the fluid will occupy (if its container allows for
expansion.) Also, unlike solids, fluids can flow.
Density

Density is given by: ρ m


= V
The symbol for density is “rho.” Density is simply mass
per unit volume. Water, for example, has a density of
about 1 gram per milliliter. (It varies slightly with
temperature and pressure.) The S.I. unit for density is the
kg / m 3. For water:

1 g 1 mL (100 cm) 3 1 kg 1000 kg


ρ = · · · =
mL 1 cm 3
m 3
1000 g m3
Pressure
Pressure is given by:
P= F
A
Pressure is simply force per unit area. Pressure is often
measured in pounds per square inch (psi), atmospheres
(atm), or torr (which is a millimeter of mercury). The S.I.
unit for pressure is the pascal, which is a Newton per
square meter: 1 Pa = 1 N / m 2. Atmospheric pressure is at
sea level is normally:
1 atm = 1.01 ·10 5 Pa = 760 torr = 14.7 psi.
At the deepest ocean trench the pressure is about 110
million pascals.
Pressure / Density Example
Schmedrick uses his 6 lb tofu recipe book to teach his little brother
Poindexter about density and pressure. He sets the book on the table
and calculates the pressure on the table, which depends on the book’s
orientation. The book’s density is 6 lb / (9” · 14” · 3”) = 0.0159 lb / in 3.
Note the pressures are very small compared to atmospheric pressure.
P = 6 lb / (9” · 3” ) P = 6 lb / (3” · 14” )
= 0.222 lb / in 2 = 0.143 lb / in 2

Tofu Cookbook

U
P = 6 lb / (9” · 14” )

F
= 0.0476 lb / in 2

O
T
U
F
O
T

9” Tofu Cookbook 3”
14”
Pressure in a Fluid
Unlike the cookbook on the table, the pressure in a fluid acts in all
directions, not just down. The force on a 4 ft 2 desktop due to the air
is:

F = (4 ft 2) (144 in 2 / ft 2) (14.7 lb / in 2) = 8467.2 lb !


The desk doesn’t collapse since the air pushes up just as hard from
below.
The reason we are not crushed by our atmosphere is because the
pressure inside our bodies is the same as the pressure outside.

Pressure in a fluid is the result of the forces exerted by


molecules as they bounce off each other in all directions.
Therefore, at a given depth in a liquid or gas, the pressure
is the same and acts in every direction.
Pressure / Density Questions
1. Why do snowshoes keep you from sinking into the snow?
The snowshoes greatly increase the area over which your weight is
distributed, thereby decreasing the pressure on the snow.
2. Why do swimmers float better in the ocean than in a lake?
Because of the salt dissolved in it, seawater is about 2.5% denser,
making people (and fish) more buoyant in it.
3. Why don’t they make longer snorkels so that people could dive
deeper without scuba gear?
The pressure difference just 6 m below water is great enough so that
the air in the diver’s lungs will be forced through the tube, collapsing
his lungs. A shorter snorkel might not be fatal, but the pressure
difference could prevent him from expanding his lungs (inhaling).
4. Which is denser, Earth or the sun?
On average, Earth is denser, but the core of the sun is much denser than
anything on Earth.
Pressure & Freezing
For most liquids—but not water—the freezing point increases if
its pressure is increased, i.e., it’s easier to freeze most liquids if
they’re subjected to high pressures. In order to turn a liquids into
a solid, the molecules typically must get close enough together to
form a crystal. Low temps mean slow moving molecules that are
closer together, but high pressure can squeeze the molecules
closer together, even if they’re not moving very slowly.
Water is an exception to this because, due to its molecular shape,
it expands upon freezing. (Most other substances occupy more
space as liquids than as solids.) So, squeezing water makes
freezing it harder. The pressure on ice due to a passing skater can
actually melt a small amount of the ice.
Pressure & Boiling
The lower the pressure on a liquid, the easier it is to make it boil,
i.e., as pressure increases, so does the boiling pt. This is because in
order for a liquid to boil, molecules need enough kinetic energy to
break free from the attraction of the molecules around it.
(Molecules with this much energy are in a gaseous state.) It’s
harder for a liquid to vaporize when subjected to high pressure,
since gases take up more space than liquids.
Water, for example, boils at temps below 100 ºC up in the
mountains where the air pressure is lower. (Water boils at 90 ºC at
10,000 ft.) It takes longer to cook food in boiling water at high
altitudes because the boiling water isn’t as hot. In a vacuum water
will boil at any temp, since there is no pressure at the surface to
prevent the water from vaporizing. At high pressure water boils at a
high temp. In a pressure cooker water can remain liquid up to
120 ºC, and the hotter water can cook food faster.
Freezing of Solutions
The freezing point of a solution, such as salt water, is lower
than the freezing point for the solvent by itself, e.g., pure
water. The higher the concentration of the solute, e.g. salt, the
more the freezing point is lowered. The reason it is more
difficult to freeze a liquid when a substance is dissolved in it is
because the “foreign” molecules or atoms of a solute interfere
with the molecules of the solvent as they’re trying to form a
crystalline structure. In the case of salt water, the sodium and
chloride ions from the dissolved salt get in the way and make it
harder for the water molecules to crystallize as a solid.
Boiling of Solutions
If you’re in a hurry and you need to bring water to boil on a
stove, should you add salt to it? answer:

No, salt actually increases the boiling point of water,


thereby increasing your wait. In order for water to boil, the
vapor pressure of the water must match to air pressure
around it. The hotter the water, the higher the vapor
pressure will be. Ions from the dissolved salt take up space
near the surface of the water. With fewer water molecules
exposed to the air, the vapor pressure is reduced. This
means that salt water must be greater than 100 ºC in order
to boil.
Suction
Suction is a force that causes a fluid or solid to be drawn into a space or
to adhere to a surface because of the difference between the external
and internal pressures. A vacuum cleaner
creates a low pressure region inside itself.
The higher pressure external air rushes into
the low pressure region, taking dirt with it.

A dart with a suction cup tip sticks to a


wall because there is very little air
between the wall and the suction cup, so
the greater pressure on the outside forces
it into the wall. This increases the
frictional force enough to support the
dart’s weight. Eventually air seeps in,
and the pressure difference diminishes
until the dart falls.
Pressure Formula
Air pressure is lower up the mountains than at sea level. Water
pressure is much lower at the surface than down deep. Pressure
depends on fluid density and depth:

P=ρ g A

h surface. The pressure at the


proof: Imagine a box under water with
the top at the
bottom is greater because of the weight of m water h
all the water above it:
P = F / A = (m water g) / A
= (m water g h) / (A h) A
= (m water g h) / V water = ρ water gh
Because of the air on top of the water, P = PA + ρ g h, where PA is
the air pressure at sea level, but PA is often negligible when h is
Pressure Depends on Depth, not Shape
All these containers are the same height. Therefore, the
pressure at the bottom of each is the same. The shape
matters not ! (See upcoming slides for further explanation.)

Note: We’re talking about the pressure inside the fluid, not the
pressures exerted by the containers on the table, which would greater
for a cylinder than a cone of the same height & base.
Pressure at a Given Depth is Constant
At a given depth, pressure must be the same. If it weren’t,
the fluid would have to be moving to the right, left, or back &
forth, which doesn’t happen with a fluid in equilibrium.
Imagine submersing a container of water in the shape of a
rectangular prism (a box). If the pressure at A were greater
than at B, then there would be a
net force on the container to the
right, since the area is the same
at each side.

A B
Why Shape Doesn’t Affect Pressure
The pressure at Y is greater than that of the surface by an amount
ρ g h, where ρ is the density of the fluid. The same is true for Q.
Since Y and Z are at the same depth, their pressures are the same.
Therefore, if the containers hold the same type of fluid, the pressure
at at Z is the same as the pressure at Q, even though the containers
have different shapes. We can repeat this process several times for an
odd-shaped container: The pressure difference from A to B depends
only on their vertical separation. A
W X

h
h

Q Z Y B
Barometers The pressure at A is the same as the pressure
of the surrounding air, since it’s at the surface.
A and B are at the same pressure, since they
are at the same height. The pressure at C is
vacuum zero, since a vacuum has no pressure. The
pressure difference from B to C is ρ g h
mercury (where ρ is the density of mercury), which is
the pressure at B, which is the pressure at A,
C which is the air pressure. Thus, the height of
the barometer directly measures air pressure.
At normal air pressure, h ≈ 30 inches
h (760 mm), which is 760 torr. The weight of
the column of mercury is balanced by the
force exerted at the bottom due to the air
pressure. Since mercury is 13.6 times heavier
than water, a water barometer would have to
A B be 13.6 times longer.
Pascal’s Principle
Suppose you’ve got some incompressible fluid, such as water,
enclosed in a container. Any change in pressure applied to the
fluid will be transmitted throughout the fluid and to the walls
of the container. This change in pressure is not diminished
even over large volumes. This is Pascal’s principle.
Example 1: You squeeze a tube of toothpaste. The pressure of
the toothpaste does not just go up at the place where you are
squeezing it. It goes up by the same amount everywhere in the
tube.
Example 2: If someone is choking and you do the Heimlich
maneuver, you apply a force to his abdomen. The increase in
pressure is transmitted to his throat and dislodges the food on
which he was choking.
Hydraulic Press
A force F1 is applied to a hydraulic press. This increases the pressure
throughout the oil, lifting the car--Pascal’s principle. This would not
work with air, since air is compressible. The pressure is the same
throughout the oil (since the effect of depth is negligible), so P = F1 /A1
= F2 /A2 F2 = (A2 / A1) F1 Since A2 > A1 the applied force is
magnified by the ratio of the areas. The I.M.A. of this machine is
A2 / A1. continued on next slide

h2
h1 F2
A2
F1

A1 oil
Hydraulic Press (cont.)
The volume of oil pushed down on the left is the same as the
increase on the right, so A1 h1 = A2 h2. Using the result on the last
slide, we get:
F2 = (A2 / A1) F1 = (h1 / h2) F1 F2 h2 = F1 h1
This shows that the output work equals the input work (ideally) as
conservation of energy demands. It’s that force distance tradeoff
again. With friction, the input work would be greater.

h2
h1 F2
A2
F1

A1 oil
Floating in Fluids
We all know that dense objects sink in fluids of lower density.
A rock sinks in air or water, and oil floats on top of water.
Basements stay cool in the summer because cool air is denser
than warm air. The USS Eisenhower is a 95 000 ton nuclear
powered aircraft carrier made of dense materials like steel, yet it
floats. If you weigh yourself under water, the scale would say
you are lighter than your true weight. All of these facts can be
explained thanks one of the greatest scientists of all time--the
Greek scientist, mathematician, and engineer--Archimedes.

USS Eisenhower Archimedes


Archimedes’ Principle
Archimedes’ principle states that any object that is partially or
completely submerged in a fluid is buoyed up a force equal to
the weight of the fluid that the object displaces. In the pic
below, a hunk of iron, a chunk of wood, and a vacuum are all
submerged. Since each is the same size, they all displace the
same amount of fluid. Archimedes’ principle says that the
buoyant force on each is the weight of the fluid that would fit
into this shape:

For the iron, mg > FB iron wood vacuum


FB FB FB
(assuming iron is denser than
the fluid), so it sinks. For the
wood, mg < FB (assuming the
fluid is denser than wood), so mg
it floats to the surface. mg
continued on next slide
Archimedes’ Principle (cont.)
Part of Captain Hook’s boat is below the surface. Archimedes’
principle says that the weight of the water Hook’s boat displaces
equals the buoyant force, which in this case is the weight of the boat
and all on board, since the boat is floating. In the pic on the right, the
boat is floating, so FB = mboat g. Archimedes says FB = mw g, the
weight of water displaced by the boat (shaded). Thus, mw g = mboat g,
or mw = mboat . This means the more people in the boat, the heavier it
will be, and the lower the boat will ride. Barges adjust their height
by taking on and pumping out water.
Steel can float if shaped like a boat,
because in that shape it can displace
as much water as its own weight.

boat
Submarines & Blimps
A sub is submerged in water, while a
blimp is submerged in air. In each a
buoyant force must balance the weight
of the vessel. Blimps and hot air
balloons must displace huge amounts
of air because air isn’t very dense. The weight of the air a blimp
displaces is equal to the blimp’s weight. Likewise, the weight of
the water a sub displaces is equal to the sub’s weight.
Proof of Archimedes’ Principle
The fluid is pressing on the box on
all sides. The horizontal forces
cancel out. The buoyant force is
Fdown
given by FB = Fup - Fdown . Fup > Fdown
since the pressure is lower at the top A
by the amount ρ g h, where ρ is the
density of the fluid.
So, FB = ρ g h A = ρ gV, where V is h
the volume of the box. But ρ V is
the mass of the fluid that the box
displaces, so ρ gV is the weight of
fluid displaced. Thus, the buoyant Fup
force = the weight of displaced fluid.
Archimedes Example
Schmedrick decides to take up ice sculpting. After several
failed attempts, he notices that his little cousin Lila has carved a
beautiful likeness of Poseidon, the Greek god of the sea. Ice is
less dense than water, 0.917 g / mL, so it floats. If Schmed and
Lila take Poseidon to the sea, what percentage of the sculpture
(by volume) will show above water?

answer: Let mw= mass of water displaced;


mice = mass of whole statue. Archimedes
says mw g = mice g ρ w Vw = ρ ice Vice
The fraction of the statue below water is
Vw / Vice = ρ ice / ρ w. So, the portion of the
ice above water is 1 - (ρ ice / ρ w)
= 1 - (0.917 / 1) = 0.083 = 8.3% This
Icebergs

Usually 1/8 th of an iceberg is


above the waterline. That part
consists of snow, which is not very
compact. The ice in the cold core is
very compact (and thus relatively
heavy) and keeps 7/8 ths of the
iceberg under water. The
temperature in the core is constant:
between -15 and -20 ºC. An iceberg
that has tumbled over several times,
has lost is light snow layers and so
the iceberg gets relatively heavier
than before (with the snow) and
because of the greater compactness,
only 1/10 th rises above the surface.
Archimedes Problem
While Yosemite Sam is trying to make
rabbit stew, Bugs is doing a little physics
in the pot. He’s standing on scale
monitoring his apparent weight.
1. As Bugs pours out water, what
happens to his apparent weight and why? answer: It goes up since
less water in the pot means less water for his body to displace, so the
buoyant force is smaller, and the normal force (scale reading) is greater.
2. If Bugs’s actual weight is W, what volume of water is Bugs
displacing when the scale reads 2 / 3 W ? answer:
W = N + FB = 2 W / 3 + FB N FB

W / 3 = FB = mw g = ρ wVw g
W
Vw = W / (3 ρ w g)
Fluid Speed in a Pipe
v1 v2
x1 A1 x2 A2
An incompressible fluid, like water, flowing through a pipe will slow
down if the pipe gets wider. Here’s why: The number of gallons per
minute flowing through the little pipe must be the same for the big
pipe, otherwise fluid would be disappearing or appearing out of
nowhere. (It’s incompressible.) If the green volume and the purple
volume both travel through the pipe in the same amount of time,

green volume = purple volume A1 x1 = A2 x2


A1 (v1 t) = A2 (v2 t) A1 v1 = A2 v2
A v = constant
The bigger the area, the slower the fluid speed.
v2
Bernoulli Equation:
P + ½ ρ v2 + ρ g y P2

= constant
v1
y2
P1
y1

P = pressure ρ = fluid density (a constant)


v = fluid speed y = height
As a nonviscous, incompressible fluid flows through a pipe that
changes in both area and height, the pressure and fluid speed change,
but the above expression remains constant everywhere in the pipe.
v2
Bernoulli Equation F2 P2
Proof x2 A2

v1
y2
P1 F1
A1 x1
y1

Let green volume = purple volume = V. The volumes travel


through the pipe in the same time. Let’s look at the work done on
all the fluid from A1 to A2 by the pressure in the pipe at each end
as the fluid at the bottom moves a distance x1 :
W = F1 x1 - F2 x2 = P1 A1 x1 - P2 A2 x2 = P1 V - P2 V
continued on next slide
v2
Bernoulli Equation F2 P2
Proof (cont.) x2 A2

v1
y2
P1 F1
A1 x1
y1
So the net work done by the fluid pressure is W = (P1 - P2) V. This
work goes into changing the potential and kinetic energy of the fluid:
(P1 - P2) V = ∆ U + ∆ K = m g y2 - m g y1 + ½ m v22 - ½ m v12
where m is the mass of the moving volume of fluid. Dividing
by the volume, we get: P1 - P2 = ρ g y2 - ρ g y1 + ½ ρ v22 - ½ ρ
v12 continued
Bernoulli Equation Proof (cont.)

The last equation shows that P + ½ ρ v 2 + ρ g y is the


same before and after traveling from the left end of the pipe
to the right end. Since these two places are completely
arbitrary, our derivation shows that P + ½ ρ v 2 + ρ g y is
a constant throughout the pipe, and the Bernoulli equation is
proven!
This equation is useful in many applications, from aviation
to medicine.
Bernoulli’s Principle
Bernoulli’s principle says that the faster a fluid is
moving the less pressure it exerts.

This is true for a nonviscous fluid flowing at a constant


height. It follows directly from the Bernoulli equation:
P + ½ ρ v 2 + ρ g y = constant. If y is a constant, then
P + ½ ρ v 2 = constant. This shows that if pressure
increases, then v decreases, and versa vise.
Airplanes
Bugs Bunny & Yosemite Sam are taking
a little plane ride. What does Bernoulli’s
principle have to do with this situation?

answer:
Air is not incompressible, but the Bernoulli principle can explain, in
part, why an airplane flies. The upper surface of the wing has a smaller
radius of curvature than the bottom surface. Air on top must travel
farther, so it moves faster, and the pressure there is lower, creating lift.
Also, because of the wing’s upward tilt, air is pushed downward. So,
the air pushes back on the wing in the direction of F.
F
Bernoulli Example 1
In an unfortunate mishap, the Tidy Bowl man gets flushed. With the
info given below, let’s figure out the pressure difference he and his
boat experience as he travels across the pipe. Since the wider pipe has
4 times the area, the water speed there is 4 times slower (recall A v =
constant). So, v2 = 2 m/s, which means P2 > P1. From Bernoulli’s
equation at a constant height, we get:
P1 + ½ ρ v12 = P2 + ½ ρ v2 2
∆ P = P2 - P1 = ½ ρ v12 - ½ ρ v2 2 = ½ ρ (v12 - v2 2)
= ½ (1000 kg / m3) (64 m2 / s2 - 4 m2 / s2)
= 30 000 kg / (m s2) = 30 000 kg m / (s2 m2)
= 30 000 N / (m2) = 30 000 Pa
P1 8 m/s v2 P2
A 4A
Bernoulli Example 2
air flow

water

Three vertical pipes open up inside the top pipe, in which air is
flowing. Because air flows faster in the thin section of the top pipe, the
pressure is lower there, and the water level beneath it rises more than
in the other two. The difference in pressure between the thick section
of the top pipe and the thin section is given by: ∆ P = ρ g h.
After eating some of Popeye’s spinach Olive
Torricelli’s Law Oyl clubs a ball clear across the course and
into a water tower. How far from the base of the tower does the water
land? answer: This is like water moving downward through a very
large pipe and then moving sideways through a very small pipe. We’ll
find vh using Bernoulli’s equation and then do projectile motion. Both
at the hole and the top the water is exposed to the air, so the pressure
there is normal air pressure. Bernoulli says:
vt Pair + ½ ρ vt2 + ρ g (8)
8m = Pair + ½ ρ vh2 + ρ g (0)
vh

15 m
Torricelli (cont.)
Pair + ½ ρ vt2 + ρ g (8) = Pair + ½ ρ vh2 + ρ g (0)
½ ρ vt2 + 8 ρ g = ½ ρ vh2
Since the area at the top is so much larger than the area of the hole,
the water is shooting out much, much faster the level is dropping at
the top. This means vt is negligible, and our equation becomes:
vt 8 ρ g = ½ ρ vh2 vh = 2 g (8)
8m
vh = 12.522 m / s. In general, the speed
of a fluid leaking from a hole is
given by:
15 m v= 2 gh
This is known as Torricelli’s
principle. continued
Torricelli (cont.)
The water molecules shooting out of the hole are projectiles being shot
horizontally at 12.522 m / s from 15 m up.

∆ y = v0 t + ½ a t 2 -15 = 0 + -4.9 t 2 t = 1.75 s

The range, then, is:


(12.522 m / s) (1.75 s) = 21.9 m
8m
vh

Note: As the water level


15 m decreases, the speed decreases at
the hole, and so does the range.
Heart Attacks & Bernoulli
plaque high pressure

artery low pressure


close up view
Arteries can become constricted with plaque (atherosclerosis),
especially if one eats a poor diet and doesn’t exercise. The red
streamlines show the path of blood as it veers around the plaque.
The situation is similar to air flowing around a curved airplane
wing. The pressure is lower where the fluid (blood) is flowing
faster. The pressure difference can dislodge the plaque. The
plaque can then lodge in and block a smaller artery. If it blocks
an artery supplying blood to the heart, a heart attack can ensue.
Bernoulli: Wind Example
The Big Bad Pig is about to blow down the house of the Three Little
Wolves. The little wolves live in a little flat-roofed house. The wolf
home has very sturdy walls, so the Big Bad Pig decides to incorporate
a little physics into his attack. Instead of blowing directly on the walls,
he blows over the roof. He blows hard enough that the air above the
roof is moving fast enough to
create a large pressure
difference. Inside the air is at
normal atmospheric pressure.
Outside it is much lower. The
pressure difference can blow
the roof right off the Three
Little Wolves’ house. Strong,
naturally occurring winds can
damage structures in the same
way.
Viscosity
Different kinds of fluids flow more easily than others. Oil, for
example, flows more easily than molasses. This is because molasses
has a higher viscosity, which is a measure of resistance to fluid flow.
Inside a pipe or tube a very thin layer of fluid right near the walls of
the tube are motionless because they get caught up in the
microscopic ridges of the tube. Layers closer to the center move
faster and the fluid sheers. The middle layer moves the fastest.

v=0

The more viscous a fluid is, the more the layers want to cling together,
and the more it resists this shearing. The resistance is due the
frictional forces between the layers as the slides past one another.
Note, there is no friction occurring at the tube’s surface since the fluid
there is essentially still. The friction happens in the fluid and generates
heat. The Bernoulli equation applies to fluids with negligible viscosity.
Turbulence
An unexpected food fights erupts in the UHS lunchroom, and
someone chucks a tomato before taking cover. The tomato is moving
to the left, but from its perspective, the air is moving to the right.
Most of the air moves around the air in a stable, streamline flow.
Behind the tomato, though, the flow takes the form of irregular
whirlpools called turbulence. Other examples of this include rising
smoke and white water rapids.
Turbulence only occurs if
a certain speed is ex-
ceeded, which depends on
object size as well as fluid
density and viscosity.
Assymetry in a moving object causes asymmetric turbulence patterns.
If the anonymous tomato chucker had put some spin on it, the
turbulence would be less symmetric, pressure on opposite sides of the
tomato would be different, and the result would be a curve ball.
Cohesion & Adhesion

The force of attraction between unlike charges in the atoms


or molecules of substances are responsible for cohesion and
adhesion.

Cohesion is the clinging together of molecules/atoms within a


substance. Ever wonder why rain falls in drops rather than
individual water molecules? It’s because water molecules cling
together to form drops.
Adhesion is the clinging together of molecules/atoms of two
different substances. Adhesive tape gets its name from the
adhesion between the tape and other objects. Water molecules
cling to many other materials besides clinging to themselves.
continued
Cohesion & Adhesion (cont.)
The meniscus in a graduated cylinder of water is due to the
adhesion between water molecules the sides of the tube. The
adhesion is greater than the cohesion between the water
molecules.
The reverse is true about a column of mercury: Mercury
atoms are attracted to each other more strongly than they are
attracted to the sides of the tube. This causes a sort of “reverse
meniscus.”

H2 O Hg
positive side
Why molecules “cling”
H H To understand why molecules cling to each other or to
O other molecules, lets take a closer look at water. Each
blue line represents a single covalent bond (one shared
pair of electrons). Two other pairs of electrons also
negative side surround the central oxygen atom. The four electron
pairs want to spread out as much as possible, which
gives H2O its bent shape. It is this shape that account for water’s
unusual property of expanding upon freezing.
The shared electrons are not shared equally. Oxygen is more
electronegative than hydrogen, meaning this is an unequal tug-o-war,
where the big, strong oxygen keeps the shared electrons closer to itself
than to hydrogen. The unequal sharing, along with the electron pairs
not involved in sharing, make water a polar molecule. Water is
neutral, but it has a positive side and a negative side. This accounts
for water’s cohesive and adhesive nature as well as its ability to
dissolve so many other substances.
Why molecules

H
H H
“cling” (cont.) C

H
C

O
H

H
H H O C

H
O H H
H

H
H
H H
O

O
O H
O

H
The dashed lines represent weak, temporary bonds between
molecules. Water molecules can cling to other polar molecules
besides them-selves, which is why water is a good solvent. Water
won’t dissolve nonpolar molecules, like grease, though. (Detergent
molecules have polar ends to attract water and nonpolar ends to mix
with the grease.) Nonpolar molecules can attract each other to some
extent, otherwise they couldn’t exist in a liquid or solid state. This
attraction is due to random asymmetries in the electron clouds around
the nuclei of atoms.
Capillary Action
How do trees pump water hundreds of feet from the ground to their
highest leaves? Why do paper towels soak up spills? Why does
liquid wax rise to the tip of a candle wick to be burned? Why must
liquids on the space shuttle be kept covered to prevent them from
crawling right out of their containers?! These are all examples of
capillary action--the movement of a liquid up through a thin tube.
It is due to adhesion and cohesion.
Capillary action is a result of adhesion and cohesion. A liquid
that adheres to the material that makes up a tube will be drawn
inside. Cohesive forces between the molecules of the liquid will
“connect” the molecules that aren’t in direct contact with the
inside of the tube. In this way liquids can crawl up a tube. In a
pseudo-weightless environment like in the space shuttle, the
“weightless” fluid could crawl right out of its container.
continued
Capillary Action (cont.)
The setups below looks just like barometers, except the tubes are open
to the air. Since the pressure is the same at the base and inside the
tube, there is no pressure difference to support the column of fluid.
The column exists because of capillarity. (Barometers must compen-
sate for this effect.) The effect is greater in thin tubes because there is
more surface area of tube per unit of weight of fluid: The force
supporting fluid is proportional to the surface area of the tube, 2 π r h,
where h is the fluid height. The weight of the fluid in the tube is
proportional to its volume, π r 2 h. If the radius of the tube is doubled,
the surface area doubles (and
so does the force supporting
the fluid), but the volume
quadruples (as does the
weight). Note: if the fluid
were mercury, rather than rise
it be depressed by the tube.
Surface Tension
Ever wonder why water beads up on a car, or
how some insects can walk on water, or how
bubbles hold themselves together? The
answer is surface tension: Because of
cohesion between its molecules, a substance
tends to contract to the smallest area possible. Water on a waxed
surface, for example, forms round beads because in this shape, more
weak bounds can be formed between molecules than if they were
arranged in one flat layer. The drops of water are flattened, however,
due to their weight. Cohesive forces are greater in mercury than in
water, so it forms a more spherical shape. Cohesive forces are weaker
in alcohol than in water, so it forms a more flattened shape.
continued

mercury water alcohol


Surface Tension (cont.)
Below the surface a molecule in fluid is pulled in all directions by its
neighbors with approximately equal strength, so the net force on it is
about zero. This is not the case at the surface. Here the net force on
a molecule is downward. Thus, the layer of molecules at the surface
are slightly compressed. This surface tension is strong enough in
water to support objects denser than the itself, like water bugs and
even razorblades (so long as the blade is laid flat on the water so that
more water molecules can help support its weight).
Surface tension can be defined as the force per unit length holding a
surface together. Imagine you’re in a water balloon fight. You have
one last balloon, but it’s got a slash in it, so you tape it up and fill it
with water. The surface tension is the force per
unit length the tape must exert on the balloon to
hold it together. A bubble is similar to the water
balloon. Rather than tape, the bubble is held
together by the cohesive forces in the bubble.
credits

• Blimp http://www.americanblimp.com/military.htm
• Submarine http://www.dreamscape.com/sabbyd/sub/

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