Mechanical Engineering Principles

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232 MECHANICAL ENGINEERING PRINCIPLES

base of the tank is 32.3 kPa, determine the
density of the petrol. Take the gravitational
field force as 9.8 m/s^2.

From above, pressure p = ρghPascal’s, where
ρis the density in kg/m^3 ,g is the gravitational
acceleration in m/s^2 andhis the vertical height of
the petrol.


Transposing gives: ρ=


p
gh

The pressurepis 32.2kPa=32200 Pa, hence,


density,ρ=

32200
9. 8 × 4. 7

=699 kg/m^3

That is,the density of the petrol is 699 kg/m^3.


Problem 6. A vertical tube is partly filled
with mercury of density 13600 kg/m^3 .Find
the height, in millimetres, of the column of
mercury, when the pressure at the base of the
tube is 101 kPa. Take the gravitational field
force as 9.8 m/s^2.

From above, pressure p = ρgh, hence vertical
heighthis given by:


h=

p
ρg

Pressure p=101 kPa=101000 Pa, thus,


h=

101000
13600 × 9. 8

= 0 .758 m

That is,the height of the column of mercury is
758 mm.


Now try the following exercise


Exercise 107 Further problems on fluid
pressure

Take the gravitational acceleration as 9.8 m/s^2


  1. Determine the pressure acting at the base
    of a dam, when the surface of the water is
    35 m above base level. Take the density
    of water as 1000 kg/m^3. [343 kPa]

  2. An uncorked bottle is full of sea water
    of density 1030 kg/m^3. Calculate, correct
    to 3 significant figures, the pressures on


the side wall of the bottle at depths of
(a) 30 mm, and (b) 70 mm below the
top of the bottle.

[(a) 303 Pa (b) 707 Pa]


  1. A U-tube manometer is used to determine
    the pressure at a depth of 500 mm below
    the free surface of a fluid. If the pressure
    at this depth is 6.86 kPa, calculate the
    density of the liquid used in the manome-
    ter. [1400 kg/m^3 ]


21.3 Atmospheric pressure


The air above the Earth’s surface is a fluid, hav-
ing a density,ρ, which varies from approximately
1.225 kg/m^3 at sea level to zero in outer space.
Sincep= ρgh, where heighthis several thou-
sands of metres, the air exerts a pressure on all
points on the earth’s surface. This pressure, called
atmospheric pressure, has a value of approxi-
mately 100 kilopascals. Two terms are commonly
used when measuring pressures:

(a) absolute pressure, meaning the pressure above
that of an absolute vacuum (i.e. zero pres-
sure), and

(b) gauge pressure, meaning the pressure above
that normally present due to the atmosphere.

Thus,absolute pressure=atmospheric pressure+
gauge pressure
Thus, a gauge pressure of 50 kPa is equivalent to an
absolute pressure of( 100 + 50 )kPa, i.e. 150 kPa,
since the atmospheric pressure is approximately
100 kPa.

Problem 7. Calculate the absolute pressure
at a point on a submarine, at a depth of 30 m
below the surface of the sea, when the
atmospheric pressure is 101 kPa. Take the
density of sea water as 1030 kg/m^3 and the
gravitational acceleration as 9.8 m/s^2.

From Section 21.2, the pressure due to the sea, that
is, the gauge pressure (pg) is given by:

pg=ρghPascal’s, i.e.

pg= 1030 × 9. 8 × 30 =302820 Pa= 302 .82 kPa
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