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Module - 1

This document defines various units related to physics, including units of force, mass, acceleration, and other derived units. It discusses Newton's second law of motion and the relationships between different force, mass, and acceleration units like Newtons, kilograms, meters/seconds squared, pounds, and slugs. It also defines concepts such as density, specific volume, specific weight, pressure, and how to use manometers and pressure gauges to measure absolute and gauge pressures. Examples are provided to demonstrate calculations involving these units and concepts.

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Daniel Escolano
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
34 views23 pages

Module - 1

This document defines various units related to physics, including units of force, mass, acceleration, and other derived units. It discusses Newton's second law of motion and the relationships between different force, mass, and acceleration units like Newtons, kilograms, meters/seconds squared, pounds, and slugs. It also defines concepts such as density, specific volume, specific weight, pressure, and how to use manometers and pressure gauges to measure absolute and gauge pressures. Examples are provided to demonstrate calculations involving these units and concepts.

Uploaded by

Daniel Escolano
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
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Basic Principle, Concept and definition

1-1 SYSTEM UNITS

𝒎𝒂
In relation to Physics2nd Law of Newton ’s. The F= 𝑲
Statement made that acceleration of a particular body
is directly proportional to the resultant force acting on
it and inversely proportional to its mass.
SI UNITS ( INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS )

K is a proportional constant

1 dyne 1 Newton 1 lbf


1 gm 1 Kgm 1 Kgm

1 cm/s 2 1 m/s 2 1 ft/s 2

. cm
K = 1 gm
dyne . s2
kgm . m
K = 1 Newton K = 1 slug . ft
. s2 lbf . s2
System of units where k is not unity

1 lbf 1g 1 Kgf
1 lbm 1 gm 1 Kgm

32.2 ft/s 2 980.66 cm/s 2 9.8066 m/s 2

. ft .m
K = 32.174 lbm
lbf . s2
K = 980.66 gmgf .. scm
2
K = 9.8066 Kgm
kgf . s2
Relation Between Kgf and Newton ( N )

Kgm . m Kgm . m
K = 1 Newton . s2 K = 9.8066 kgf . s2

Kgm . m .m
Therefore; 1 Newton . s2
= 9.8066 Kgm
kgf . s2

1 Kgf = 9.8066 N

Relation Between lbm and slug

. ft . ft
K = 1 slug
lbf . s2
K = 32.174 lbm
lbf . s2

. ft lbm . ft
Therefore; 1 slug
lbf . s2
= = 32.174 lbf . s2

1 Slug = 32.174 lbm


ACCELERATION
A unit of force is one that produces unit acceleration
𝒎𝒂
in a body of unit mass. F= 𝑲
1 poundal
1 lbm 1 poundal = ( 1 lbm )( 1 ft/s 2 )
F is force in piundals
𝑚
𝑘
is mass in pounds
1 ft/s 2 a is acceleration in ft/s 2

𝒎𝒂
F=
𝑲
1 lbf
1 slug 1 poundal = ( 1 slug )( 1 ft/s 2 )
𝑙𝑏𝑓 .s2
1 slug = 1 𝑓𝑡
F is force in piundals
𝑚
1 ft/s 2 is mass in pounds
𝑘
a is acceleration in ft/s 2
MASS AND WEIGHT

The mass of a body is the absolute quantity of matter


in it. The weight of a body means the force of gravity
(Fg) on the body.

𝒎 𝑭 𝑭𝒈
𝑲
= 𝒂
= 𝒈
Where:
g = acceleration produces by force Fg
a = acceleration produced by another force F

At or near the surface of the earth, k and g are


numerically equal, so are m and Fg
SI BASE UNITS
Quantity Unit Name Symbol

Length meter m
Mass kilogram Kg
Time second s
Electric Current ampere A
Thermodynamic Temperature kelvin k
Amount of Matter mole mol
Luminous Intensity candela cd
DERIVED UNITS
AREA SQUARE METER m2
VOLUME CUBIC METER m3
SPEED, VELOCITY METER PER SECOND m/s
ACCELERATION METER PER SECON SQUARE s/m2
DENSITY KILOGRAM PER CUBIC METER Kg/m2
SPECIFIC VOLUME CUBIC METER PER KILOGRAM m3 /Kg
CURRENT DENSITY AMPERE PER SQUARE METER A/m2

FORCE NEWTON N m. Kg/s 2


PRESSURE PASCAL Pa Kg/(m. s 2 )
FREQUENCY HERTZ Hz 1/s
ENERGY,WORK,HEAT JOULE J m2 . Kg/s 2
POWER WATT W m2 . Kg/s 3
PROBLEM -1
What is the weight of a 55 Kgm man at STANDARD condition?
Given:
m = 55 Kgm g = 9.81 m/s 2

Solution:
𝒎𝒂 𝟓𝟓 𝑲𝒈𝒎 . 𝟗.𝟖𝟏m/s2
Fg= =
𝑲
9.81 Kgm .m
kgf . s2

Fg= 55 Kgf
PROBLEM -2
A block whose mass of 3 metric tons is accelerated uniformly
from standstill to 100 Km/h in 8 sec. Find the Mass in Pounds?,
The acceleration?, and the driving Force in Newton.
Given:
m = 3 metric tons; v2 = 100 Km/h; t = 8 sec
Solution:
𝟏𝟎𝟎𝟎𝒌𝒈 𝟐.𝟐 𝒍𝒃
@ mass = 3 metric ton ( 𝟏 𝒎 𝒕𝒐𝒏𝒔 ) ( 𝟏 𝒌𝒈
) = 6600 lbm
@ velocity formula:
V2 = V1 – at
𝒌𝒎 𝒌𝒎 𝟏𝟎𝟎𝟎𝒎
𝒗𝟐 −𝒗𝟏 (𝟏𝟎𝟎 −𝟎 )( ) m
𝒉 𝒉 𝟏𝒌𝒎
a= = 𝟑𝟔𝟎𝟎 𝒔𝒆𝒄 = 3. 47
𝒕 𝟖 𝒔𝒆𝒄 s2
𝟏 𝒉𝒓
@ force
𝒎
𝒎𝒂 (𝟑𝟎𝟎𝟎 𝒌𝒈)(𝟑.𝟒𝟕 2 )
s
F=
𝑲
= 𝒌𝒈. 𝒎 = 10,410 N
𝟏
𝑵 .s2
1-2 Seatwork

Send your answer to merlincapistrano@gmail.com


examination will take only 20mins
SPECIFIC VOLUME, DENSITY AND SPECIFIC WEIGHT
The density ρ of any substance is its mass (not weight) per unit
volume.

𝒎 𝒌𝒎 𝒈𝒎 𝒍𝒃 𝒍𝒃 𝒔𝒍𝒖𝒈𝒔
ρ = 𝑽 = ( m3 , cm3 , in3 , ft3 , 𝑓𝑡 3 )
The specific volume 𝑣 is the volume of a unit mass.

𝑽 𝟏
𝑣 = 𝒎= ρ
The specific weight γ of any substance is the force of gravity on
a unit volume.
𝑭𝒈 𝒎𝒈 ρ𝒈
γ= ( = ) ( g = 9.81 m/s2 ) SI UNITS
𝑽 𝑽 𝒌
( g = 3.2 ft/s 2 ) ENGLISH UNITS
PROBLEM -1
What is the specific weight of a water of STANDARD condition?
Given:
m
g = 9.81 s2
𝒌𝒈 𝟏𝟎𝟎𝟎𝒌𝒈 𝒈𝒎 𝟏𝒕𝒐𝒏 𝟗𝟖𝟏𝟎𝑵 𝟔𝟒.𝟒 𝒍𝒃𝒔
Water Standard = ( ,, , , 3 , )
𝑳 m3 cm3 m3 𝑚 ft3
Solution:

𝒌𝒈𝒎 𝒎
ρ𝒈 𝟏𝟎𝟎𝟎 ( 𝟗.𝟖𝟏 ) 𝒌𝒈𝒇
γ= = 𝒎𝟑 𝒔𝟐
= 1000
9.81 Kgm . m
𝒌 𝒎𝟑
kgf . s2
PROBLEM -2
A fluid that occupies a volume of 24L weights 225 N at a location
where the gravitational acceleration is 9.81 m/s2 . Determine the
mass of this fluid and its density.
Given:
m
W = 225 N g = 9.81 V= 24L
s2
Solution:

W
m= = 𝟐𝟐𝟓 𝑵 𝒌𝒈. 𝒎
= 22.93 kg
𝒈 9.81sm2 𝑵 .s2

𝒎 𝟐𝟐.𝟗𝟑 𝒌𝒈 𝑘𝑔
ρ= = m3
= 955.416 m3
𝑽 24 L1000 𝐿
PRESSURE https://www.youtube.com
/watch?v=gsz50msdqmo

Pressure Standard
Patm = 1 atm = 29.92 in
= 14.7 psi = 34 ft
N
= 101325 m3
= 10. 336 m
= 746 mm Hg = 760 Torr
1. By using manometers
(a) Absolute pressure is greater than atmospheric pressure ( Pabs ˃ Patm )
Po
P = absolute pressure
Po = atmospheric pressure
Pg = gage pressure, the
Pg pressure due to the
P hg
liquid column hg

P = Po + Pg
(b) Absolute pressure is less than atmospheric pressure ( Pabs ˂ Patm )

P = Po - Pg
P
hg Pg Po The gage reading is called
vacuum pressure or the vscuum

2. By using pressure gage


a device for measuring gage pressure.
GAGE PRESSURE

Po P = Po + Pg

Fg ρg hg
Fg hg Pg Pg = A
= γ hg = K

P = Po + ρg hg
P
PROBLEM -1
A pressure gage connected to a tank reads 500 kPa at a location
where the atmospheric pressure is 94 kPa. Determine the absolute
pressure in the tank
Given:
Pg = 500 kPa Patm = 94 kPa
Solution:

Pabs = Patm + Pgage


= 500 kPa + 94 Kpa

= 594 Kpa
PROBLEM -2
kg
A 50 meter vertical tank of water (ρ = 1890 m3 ) is located where
m
g = 9.63 s2 . Find the pressure at the base of the tank.
Given:
kg m
ρ = 1890 m3 g = 9.63 s2 .
Solution:
ρg hg
Pg = K

1890mkg3 m
(9.63 2 )
s
= 𝒌𝒈. 𝒎 ( 50 m )
1
𝑵 .s2

N
= 910,035 or 910 kPa
m2
ATMOSPHERIC PRESSURE
A barometer is used to measure atmospheric pressure(Patm)

Po
ho Po = γ ho

ho = height of column of liquid


supported by Po
Barometer
PROBLEM -3
A vertical column of water will be supported to
what height by standard atmospheric pressure.

At standard condition
γw = 62.4 lb/ft 3 Po = 14.7 ft/in2 or psi

Solution:
in2
Po ( 14.7 )( 144 lb
in2 ft2
)
ho = γw = = 33.9 ft
62.4 lb ft3

SPECIFIC GRAVITY ( spgr )


γ
Is a ratio of the specific weight of Sp.gr =
the substance to that of water γw
PROBLEM -4
kg
The pressure of a boiler is 9.5 the barometer pressure of the
cm2
atmosphere is 768 mm of Hg and spgr of 13.6. Find the absolute
pressure in the boiler.
Given:
kg kg
Pg = 9.5 cm2 hg = 768 mm Hg γw = 1000 m3
Solution:

Po = γ ho = γhg ho = spgr(γw ) ( ho )
kg
Po = 13.6(1000 )( 0.768 m)
m3
kg 1m kg
Po = 10,444 m2 ( 100 𝑐𝑚 )3 = 1.04 cm2
kg kg kg
P = Po + Pg = 1.04 cm2 + 9.5 cm2 = 10.54 cm2
TEMPERATURE https://www.youtube.com
/watch?v=6BHbJ_gBOk0

Derive the relation between degrees Fahrenheit


and Degrees Centigrade. 9
̊F = 5 ̊ C + 32

212 ̊F 100 ̊C
5
̊C = ( ̊ F ) − 32
t ̊F t ̊C 9

32 ̊F 0 ̊C ̊R = ̊ F + 460
t ̊F −32 t ̊C − 0
212 −32
= 100 − 0 ÷20 ̊K = ̊ C + 273
(divisible by 20 )
.9
̊F−32 ̊C 180 ̊ C
= , ̊F = + 32
180 100 100.5

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