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JOHN PAUL COLLEGE FLUID MECHANICS

TOTAL HYDROSTATIC PRESSURE Liquid Below the Body:

A. PLANE SURFACE

Force: Location:

I At
P = hA e=
Ay

P = total hydrostatic pressure on plane area “A” subjected to


liquid (kN)
e = distance of the center of pressure “cp” below the center
of gravity “cg” along the body (m)
h = distance of the cg below the liquid surface “l.s.”, on the Force Components: Locations:
vertical (m)
I
y = distance of the cg below the l.s. along the body (m) → e= (same as plane surface)
Ay
I = moment of inertia of A with respect to its centroidal axis
(m4) Pv = Vol → at the c.g. of volume or
centroid of At
Pv = At L

1. A circular gate 1.5 m. in diameter is inclined at an angle


of 45°. Fresh water stands on one side of the gate to a
height of 10 m. above the center of the gate.
a. Evaluate the total force on the gate.
b. Locate the point of action of the total force from
the bottom on the plane of the gate.
c. If the gate is hinged at the top, evaluate the force
normal to the gate at the bottom that will require
to open it in kN.

2. A tank containing water is shown. Calculate the total


resultant force acting on side ABCD of the container and
the location of the center of pressure.

3. The gate AB shown in Figure is hinged at A and kept


closed by a force P at B. Determine the nearest value to
B. CURVED SURFACE the:
a. Total force exerted by oil on the gate.
P = Ph 2 + Pv 2 b. Location of this total force from A.
Force:
c. Determine the force of oil on the gate if the
pressure at the oil surface is -18 kPa.
P = total hydrostatic pressure on a curved surface (kN).
Ph = horizontal component; total hydrostatic pressure on
plane area “A” which is the projection of the curved one
on the vertical.
Pv = vertical component; weight of liquid whose volume is
traced by moving the curve vertically “upward” until
the liquid surface or its extension.

Liquid Above the Body:

4. The 5-m wide sluice gate “ab” shown, tangent to the


At vertical wall at “a”, holds back water. The surface of the
gate in contact with the water can be taken as part of a
cylinder with radius 4 m.
a. Determine the horizontal force acting on the
curve.
b. Determine the total force on the curve.
c. Determine the location of the vertical force from
pt. “a”.

ENGR. JERWIN D. VILLANUEVA, RCE, RMP, ME-1


@jereinforcedwin@gmail.com
0930-927-3937
JOHN PAUL COLLEGE FLUID MECHANICS
7. Isosceles triangle gate AB is hinged at A and weighs 1500
N. What horizontal force P is required at point B for
equilibrium?
(Ans. 18 kN)

5. The tank shown in Figure is 3 m wide into the paper.


Neglect atmospheric pressure. Unit weight of water is
9.79 kN/m3. Determine the nearest value to the:
a. vertical component of the total hydrostatic force
on the quarter-circle panel AB, in kN.
b. resultant hydrostatic force acting on the quarter-
circle panel AB, in kN. 8. A vertical plane area having the shape shown is
c. angle that the resultant hydrostatic force make
immersed in an oil bath (specific weight = 8.75 kN/m3).
with the horizontal, in degrees.
Determine the magnitude of the resultant force acting on
one side of the area as a result of the oil.
(Ans. 373.3 kN)

9. An open tank has a vertical partition and on one side


contains gasoline with a density ρ = 700 kg/m3 at a depth
of 4 m as shown. A rectangular gate that is 4 m high and
2 m wide and hinged at one end is located in the partition.
Water is slowly added to the empty side of the tank. At
what depth h, will the gate start to open?
6. Gate AB in the figure is semicircular, hinged at B, and (Ans. 3.55 m)
held by horizontal force P at A.
a. Determine the hydrostatic force acting on the
gate. (Ans. 932.9 kN)
b. Determine the location of the hydrostatic force
from point A. (Ans. 1.82 m)
c. What force P is required for equilibrium? (Ans.
366.8 kN)

10. A 3-m diameter open cylindrical


tank contains water and has a
hemispherical bottom as shown.
Determine the magnitude, line of
action, and direction of the force
of the water on the curved
bottom.
(Ans. 485.4 kN; The force is
directed vertically downward
and due to symmetry, it acts on
the hemisphere along the vertical
axis of the cylinder)
ENGR. JERWIN D. VILLANUEVA, RCE, RMP, ME-1
@jereinforcedwin@gmail.com
0930-927-3937
JOHN PAUL COLLEGE FLUID MECHANICS

ENGR. JERWIN D. VILLANUEVA, RCE, RMP, ME-1


@jereinforcedwin@gmail.com
0930-927-3937

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