Lecture-Fluid Statics
Lecture-Fluid Statics
Fluid Statics
Content Topics
• Fluid Static & Pascal Law
• Relationship between Pressure and elevation
• Fluid Pressure on Immersed, Vertical and
Inclined Surfaces
• Centre of pressure
Fluid Statics
• Fluid Statics means fluid at rest.
• At rest, there are no shear stresses, the only force is the
normal force due to pressure is present.
• Pressure is defined as:
• “Force per Unit Area” Or
“The amount of force exerted on a unit area of a substance or
on a surface.”
• This can be stated by the equation:
dF
(For Finite Area) p dA (For Infinitsma l Area)
F
p
A
• Units : N/m2(Pa), lbs/ft2 (psf), lbs/in2 (psi)
Example
A load of 200 pounds (lb) is exerted on a piston confining oil
in a circular cylinder with an inside diameter of 2.50 inches
(in). Compute the pressure in the oil at the piston.
Solution:
Principles about Pressure
• Two important principles about pressure were described by
Blaise Pascal, a seventeenth-century scientist:
1. Pressure acts uniformly in all directions on a small volume of
a fluid.
2. In a fluid confined by solid boundaries, pressure acts
perpendicular to the boundary.
Direction of fluid pressure on boundaries
Pressure expressed in Height of Fluid
Ch-3 by RS Khurmi
Total Fluid Pressure on Immersed
Surfaces
Ch-3 by RS Khurmi
Total Fluid Pressure on Vertically
Immersed Surfaces
Total Fluid Pressure on Vertically
Immersed Surfaces
Total Fluid Pressure on Vertically
Immersed Surfaces
Total Fluid Pressure on Vertically
Immersed Surfaces
Total Fluid Pressure on Inclined
Immersed Surfaces
Total Fluid Pressure on Inclined
Immersed Surfaces
Total Fluid Pressure on Inclined
Immersed Surfaces
Centre of Pressure
Centre of Pressure
For details see 3.8 (Khurmi) Centre of Pressure Vertically Immersed Surface
Centre of Pressure
Centre of Pressure
Geometrical Properties of some important
Plane Surfaces
Example
Example
Content Topics
• Absolute and Gage Pressure
• Measurement of Pressure
• Pressure measurement devices
Absolute and Gage Pressure
• Atmospheric Pressure: It is the force per unit area exerted by the
weight of air above that surface in the atmosphere of Earth (or that
of another planet). It is also called as barometric pressure.
• Gauge Pressure: It is the pressure, measured with the help of
pressure measuring instrument in which the atmospheric pressure
is taken as Datum (reference from which measurements are made).
• Absolute Pressure: It is the pressure equal to the sum of
atmospheric and gauge pressures. Or
• If we measure pressure relative to absolute zero (perfect Vacuum)
we call it absolute pressure.
• Vacuum: If the pressure is below the atmospheric pressure we call
it as vacuum.
pabs patm p gage
Measurement of Pressure
• There are many ways to measure pressure in a
fluid. Some are discussed here:
1. Barometers
2. Bourdon gauge
3. Pressure transducers
4. Piezometer Column
5. Simple Manometers
6. Differential Manometers
1. Barometers:
• To measure the atmospheric pressure.
• Procedure:
1. Immerse the open end of tube in a liquid
which is open to atmosphere.
2. The liquid will rise in the tube if we
exhaust air from the tube.
3. If all the air is removed and the tube is
long enough, than only pressure on the
surface is the vapour pressure and liquid
will reach its max. possible height (y).
pO p a p atm gy pvapour
If the vapour pressureon liquid surfacein tube is negligible than :
p atm gy
2. Bourdon Gauge:
• The pressure, above or below the atmospheric pressure,
may be easily measured with the help of a bourdon’s
tube pressure gauge.
• It consists on an elliptical tube: bent into an arc of a
circle. This bent up tube is called Bourdon’s tube.
h 2 200 mm 0.2m
s1 1 and s 2 13 .6
Let h Pressurehead of mercury in terms on head of water.
1. Let us consider the vesselis to be empty and Z - Z be the datum line.
Pressurehead in the right limb aboveZ - Z
s1h1 1xh h
Pressurehead in the left limb aboveZ - Z
s 2 h2 13 .6 x0.2 2.72 m
Equating; h 2.72m
2. Consider the vesselto be completely filled with water.
As a result, let the mercury level goes down by x meters in the right limb, and
the mercury level go up by thesame amount in the left limb.
Therefore total height of water in the right limb
x h 3 x 2.72 3 x 5.72
Pressurehead in the right limb 1(x 5.72) x 5.72
We know that manometer reading in this case:
0.2 2x
Pressurehead in the left limb
13.6 (0.2 2x) 2.72 27.2x
Equating the pressures:
x 5.72 2.72 27.2x
x 0.115m
and manometer reading 0.2 (2x0.115) 0.43m 430 mm
Differential Manometer:
• It is a device used for measuring the difference of pressures,
between the two points in a pipe, or in two different pipes.
• It consists of U-tube containing a heavy liquid (mercury)
whose ends are connected to the points, for which the
pressure is to be found out.
Procedure:
Let us take the horizontal surface Z-Z, at which heavy liquid
and light liquid meet in the left limb, as datum line.
Let, h=Difference of levels (also known as differential
manomter reading)
ha, hb= Pressure head in pipe A and B, respectively.
s1, s2= Sp. Gravity of light and heavy liquid respectively.
Differential Manometer:
1. Consider figure (a):
2. Pressure head in the left limb above
Z-Z = ha+s1(H+h)= ha+s1H+s1h