Volume of Prisms
Prior Knowledge:
Before attempting this sheet, students should be able to:
• calculate the area of a circle (πr2)
• round numbers to whole numbers
• calculate the area of:
1
• triangles (2 × base × height)
• rectangles (length × width)
• squares (length × width)
1
• trapeziums (2 × (a + b) × height)
The volume of a shape is the measure of the three-dimensional space it covers. The units of
measurement for volume are cubic units, for example cm3 or m3.
A prism is a solid (3D) object which is the same shape all the way through; it has a constant cross-
section.
To calculate the volume of a prism, including a circular prism, learn this formula by heart:
Volume = area of cross-section × length or height
cross-section
cross-section
Height
gth
len
For example, the cross-section of this cuboid is a rectangle.
height
width
length
To calculate the area of the cross-section, it would be length × width. You would then multiply this
by the height, hence the formula: length × width × height.
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Volume of Prisms
Example 1
Calculate the volume of the prism shown below.
4cm
m
12c
5cm
The first step is to calculate the area of the cross-section. In other words, you need to calculate
the area of the base of the shape. (The base is always the face which is the same as the cross-
section).
This shape is a triangular prism; its base is a triangle. Therefore, you need to calculate the area
1
of the triangle. Remember that the formula for calculating the area of a triangle is 2 × base ×
height.
1
2
× 5 × 4 = 10cm2
Now that you have the area of the cross-section, multiply it by its length to calculate the volume.
10 × 12 = 120cm3 (Don’t forget the units!)
Example 2
Calculate the volume of the cylinder, giving your answer correct to the nearest whole number.
4cm
8cm
Start by calculating the area of the cross section. In other words - the area of the circle. Remember
that the formula for calculating the area of a circle is πr2.
π × 42
π × 16 = 50.26548246...cm2
(It’s important that you don’t round your answer at this stage – you could also leave your answer
in terms of π, e.g. 16π.)
Now, multiply the area of the circle by the height.
50.26548246... × 8 = 402.1238597...
As you don’t have any further calculations to do, you should now round the answer to the
degree which the question has asked for. In this case, the nearest whole number.
3
Therefore, the answer is 402cm . (Don’t forget the units!)
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Volume of Prisms
Your turn
1. Calculate the volume of each shape, giving your answers correct to the nearest whole
number where necessary.
a. e. 6cm
3cm 4cm
cm
m 20
10c 14cm
6cm
b. f.
6cm
3.5m
5cm
12cm 16m
c. g.
2m
2.75cm
m
1.1m 16c
1.2m 5.5cm
d. h. 5.6cm
5cm
3cm 3cm m
.1c
10.2cm 18
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Volume of Prisms
2. The volume of the triangular prism is 106cm3. Calculate the measurement of the missing
length marked x.
4cm
x
5cm
3. The volume of the prism shown below is 216cm3. Calculate the cross-sectional area of the
prism.
16cm
4. The cuboid and the triangular prism have the same volume. Calculate the measurement of
the missing length marked x.
7cm
3.5cm
m 2cm
16c x
6cm
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Volume of Prisms
5. Boxes of chocolate are placed into a crate. Each box of chocolate is a cuboid and the crate
is also a cuboid. Calculate the number of boxes of chocolate which will fit inside the crate.
20cm
4cm
8cm 32cm
15cm 60cm
Challenge
3
A fish tank is filled 4 full of water. Joshua pours 1500ml more water into the fish tank. How
many litres of water does the fish tank now contain?
Hint: 1ml = 1cm3
0.75m
20cm
1.5m
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