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Lesson 19 Force Due To Liquid Pressure Revised

The document discusses force due to liquid pressure. It provides the formula for calculating force (F) due to liquid pressure as F=whA, where w is the density of the liquid, h is the depth, and A is the area. It explains that the force increases with increasing density, depth, or area. It also provides examples of calculating total force on different shapes submerged in water, such as a trapezoidal trough, triangular dam face, cubical container, triangular plate, and swimming pool bottom.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
54 views

Lesson 19 Force Due To Liquid Pressure Revised

The document discusses force due to liquid pressure. It provides the formula for calculating force (F) due to liquid pressure as F=whA, where w is the density of the liquid, h is the depth, and A is the area. It explains that the force increases with increasing density, depth, or area. It also provides examples of calculating total force on different shapes submerged in water, such as a trapezoidal trough, triangular dam face, cubical container, triangular plate, and swimming pool bottom.

Uploaded by

omay12
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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LESSON 21

Force Due to
Liquid Pressure
Force Due to Liquid Pressure
• The force F on an area A at a depth h in a liquid
of density w is given by
F=whA
• The force will increase if the density increases,
or if the depth increases or if the area increases.
• So if we have an unevenly shaped plate
submerged vertically in a liquid, the force on it
will increase with depth. Also, if the shape of the
plate changes as we go deeper, we have to
allow for this.
The force due to liquid pressure at the bottom of
any two containers are equal since the bottom has
the same areas and the depths of the liquid are
equal.

For a horizontal plate submerged in a liquid, the


force due to liquid pressure is uniform throughout
the plate
For a vertical plate submerged in a liquid, the force
is greater on the lower part due to the height.
In differential form,

dF  whdA
In integral form,
b
F  w hdA
a

Where h is the distance of the element or the strip


from the liquid surface.
Example 1
A trough having a trapezoidal cross
section is full of water. If the trapezoid is
3m wide at the top, 2m wide at the bottom
and 2m deep, find the total force owing to
liquid pressure on one end of the trough.

14
answer wN
3
Example 2
The face of a dam adjacent to the water is
vertical and its shape is in the form of an
isosceles triangle 250 m wide across the
top and 100m in the center. If the water is
20m deep in the center, find the total force
on the dam due to liquid pressure.

10,000
answer w
3
Example 3
Find the force on one side of a cubical
container 6.0 cm on an edge if the
container is filled with mercury. The weight
density of mercury is 133 kN/cubic meters.
Example 4
A right triangular plate of base 2.0 m and
height 1.0 m is submerged vertically, with
the top vertex 3.0 m below the surface.
Find the force on one side of the plate.
Example 5
The face of a dam adjacent to the water is
inclined at an angle of 30 degrees from the
vertical. The shape of the face is a
rectangle of width 50m and slant height of
30m. If the dam is full of water, find the
total force due to liquid pressure on the
face.

answer 11250 3w N
Example 6
The bottom of a swimming pool is an
inclined plane. The pool is 2m deep at one
end and 8m deep at the other end. If the
width of the pool is 25m and the length is
40m, find the force due to liquid pressure
on the bottom.

answer 250 409 w N

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