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MBTutorial 3 - BMCF - 2223 (Pressure in Manometer)

1. This document discusses pressure measurement using various types of manometers and pressure gauges. It includes 7 tutorial problems involving determining pressures using readings from manometers, gauges, and fluid heights. 2. The problems cover topics like calculating absolute pressure from a vacuum gauge reading, determining pressure differences between two fluids using a U-tube manometer, and finding densities based on fluid height changes in connected containers. 3. Diagrams of manometer and pressure measurement system setups are provided to illustrate the different problems.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
600 views3 pages

MBTutorial 3 - BMCF - 2223 (Pressure in Manometer)

1. This document discusses pressure measurement using various types of manometers and pressure gauges. It includes 7 tutorial problems involving determining pressures using readings from manometers, gauges, and fluid heights. 2. The problems cover topics like calculating absolute pressure from a vacuum gauge reading, determining pressure differences between two fluids using a U-tube manometer, and finding densities based on fluid height changes in connected containers. 3. Diagrams of manometer and pressure measurement system setups are provided to illustrate the different problems.

Uploaded by

Bk Lim
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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UNIVERSITI TEKNIKAL MALAYSIA MELAKA FAKULTI KEJURUTERAAN MEKANIKAL BMCF 2223- FLUID MECHANICS I TUTORIAL 3 PRESSURE MEASUREMENT BY MANOMETER

1. A vacuum gage connected to a chamber reads 36 kPa at a location where the atmospheric pressure is 92 kPa. Determine the absolute pressure in the chamber. [56 kPa] 2. The water in a tank is pressurized by air, and the pressure is measured by a multifluid manometer as shown in figure 1. Determine the gage pressure of air in the tank if h1 = 0.2 m, h2 = 0.3 m, and h3 = 0.46 m. Take the densities of water, oil, and mercury to be 1000 kg/m3 and 13,600 kg/m3, respectively. [56.9 kPa]

Figure 1 3. A vacuum gage connected to a tank reads 30 kPa at a location where the barometric reading is 755 mmHg. Determine the absolute pressure in tank. Take densities of Hg = 13,590 kg/m3. [70.6 kPa] 4. Both a gage and manometer are attached to a gas tank to measure its pressure (Figure 2). If the reading on the pressure gage is 80 kPa, determine the distance between the two fluid levels of the manometer if the fluid is (a) mercury, ( = 13,600 kg/m3) [0.49 m] (b) water ( = 1000 kg/m3) [6.63 m]

Figure 2

5. Freshwater and seawater flowing in parallel horizontal pipelines are connected to each other by a double U-tube manometer as shown in figure 3. Determine the pressure difference between the two pipelines. Take the density of seawater at that location to be density is 1035 kg/m3. Can the air column be ignored in the analysis? [3.39 kPa, can be neglected]

Figure 3 6. The gage pressure of the air in the tank shown in figure 4 is measured to be 65 kPa. Determine the differential height h of the mercury column. [0.47 m]

Figure 4 7. The top part of a water tank is divided into two compartments as shown in figure 5 Now a fluid with an unknown density is poured into one side, and the water level rises a certain amount on the other side to compensate for this effect. Based on the final fluid heights shown on the figure, determine the density of the fluid added. Assume the liquid does not mix with water. [667 kg/m3]

Figure 5

8. Two water tanks are connected to each other through a mercury manometer with inclined tubes, as shown in figure 6. If the pressure difference between the two tanks is 20 kPa, calculate aand . [7.5 cm, 34.0]

Figure 6

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