Gasses and Pressure Floating on Air Bloomfield Chapter 5.1 1. Gases and pressure: - How tires work - Why does your sealed Tupperware explode in the microwave? 2. The atmosphere: - Why is there less O2 on the top of Longs Peak? 3. Balloons - Helium and Hot air … why do these rise? Important physics: Lecture 15: Gasses and Pressure Bloomfield 5.1 - Forces: Newton’s Laws (Fnet = mass x acceleration), - Weight = (mass in kg) x g - Ideal gas law - Pressure - Buoyancy force – Archimedes principle. Revisit 1010 notes on force and NET force if you need a refresher Reminders: HW 7 available. Due Monday 10pm. Lab 6 today and tomorrow Reading quiz in a moment Research topic due this Friday 1 Air Pressure 2 Need to raise pressure of tire to make it work. Think about all the different ways to raise pressure of a gas. Work in group, write down 3 ways and why this would increase pressure. Air pressure: - Air contains lots of small molecules zooming around. - Hit objects and each other … exert a force 1. Add more gas molecules (Increase N (# of molecules) Increase P, more collisions with wall/each other every second) 2. Make gas hotter (Increase T (temperature) Increase P, moving faster, more collisions, hitting harder) 3. Make box smaller (Decrease V (volume) Increase P, higher density, more collisions with wall/each other every second) Force exerted = pressure of air x area OR Pressure = Force/Area (Units: Pa = N/m2) With a totally flat bike tire (tubeless tire), the air pressure on the inside of the tire is: a. less than the air pressure on the outside b. greater than the air pressure on the outside c. equal to the air pressure on the outside. Rim Looking at behavior of a gas gives “ideal gas law”: Pressure= k * (number of particles) * (Temperature in K) Volume In Pascals (Pa) Boltzmann’s Constant (k): 1.38x10-23 Pa m3/(atom K) Tube Number Density = # atoms/m3 Temperature in absolute scale (Kelvin) 0 C = 273 K room temp = 293 K 3 4 Ideal gas law Pressure= k * (number of particles) * (Temperature in K) Volume Forces review P = kNT V Does pressure depend on type of gas atom/molecule? (e.g.He vs Air): a) yes b) no http://www.colorado.edu/physics/phet/simulations/force1d/force1d.jnlp 5 6 1 DO NOT(!) BE ALARMED A loud “boom” sound will occur between 11:15 and 12:15 pm on the 1st floor of Duane. This is a scheduled demo so do not worry. We apologize for this brief disturbance in the name of education. What will happen if we remove the air from inside the drum? a. Nothing b. The drum will explode c. The drum will implode d. Something else Pressure Gauge REMOVE AIR FROM INSIDE PUMP 7 How much force is air pressure putting on the steel drum? The mighty force of Air Pressure! Initially: Air both inside and out Pressure inside = Pressure outside No Net Force on walls of barrel (of course still have force of gravity) 8 Force = (Air) Pressure * Area Top of Atmosphere (~50 km) As Air removed: Atmospheric pressure is defined as the force per unit area exerted against a surface by the weight of air above that surface So how much does the atmosphere above us weigh? Add up weight of every air molecule in column: Total weight = 10,300 kg* 9.8 m/s2 = 101,000 Newtons Pressure at sea level = 101,000N/1m2 = 101,000 Pa (LIKE A BIG BUS ON EVERY m2!) Column of Air above ground (1 m2). To Pump ? •Air molecules at near sea level must exert this force/area upwards to support column of air above. •But air molecules move randomly so they exert the same pressure (or force per area) in ALL directions (not just vertically). •Pressure is not a vector (does not have a direction) Sea Level 9 What about on Long’s Peak? What about in Boulder? Boulder Elevation 5400 ft Top of Atmosphere Top of Atmosphere Boulder Elevation 5400 ft Longs peak Elevation 14,000 ft (Not to scale!) • Pressure = Weight/Area of Atmosphere ABOVE • Atmosphere ~80% above, ~20% below Pressure = 20% less than at sea level Boulder Sea Level Runners at the Bolder Boulder - Pressure = Weight/area of Atmosphere ABOVE - Atmosphere ~60% above, ~40% below - Air pressure on LP 40% LESS than at sea level! Longs Peak English tourist Boulder Sea Level Boulderite 11 12 2 Buoyancy and Archimede’s Principle Consider cube of air defined by these imaginary borders: Also air pressure pushing against front and back of cube. What are the forces acting on the cube of air? a. just gravity down b. gravity down, air pressure pushing equally on all sides. c. gravity down, air pressure from all sides but bigger on bottom than top. Remember back, Phys1010… Fnet = ma. If air parcel is stationary, then: a. Fair pressure > Wair in cube b. Fair pressure < Wair in cube c. Fair pressure = Wair in cube d. No way of knowing. d. gravity down, air pressure from all sides but bigger on top than bottom. GROUND e. only air pressure GROUND 13 14 Buoyancy Force Question Buoyancy Force #1 Air Buoyancy force #2 He Fair pressure called Fbuoyancy #3 AIR Fbuoyancy = Wair in cube = massair × g = densityair × volumecube × g How does F buoyancy compare for each balloon? A. F buoyancy for #1 > #2 > #3 B. F buoyancy for #2 > #1 > #3 C. F buoyancy for #1 = #2; & both larger than #3 D. F buoyancy for #2 > #3 > #1 E. F buoyancy for #1 = #3; & both smaller than # 2. 16 Buoyancy Force and Archimede’s Principle #2 He How does F buoyancy compare for each balloon? 1. F buoyancy = upward force from pressure of air surrounding object 2. The air surrounding object cannot tell what it is pushing on … could be a balloon, a person, a table, or just air … hits it the same regardless of what it is hitting. 3. Archimede’s principle: F buoyancy upwards equals the weight of the air (or more generally the weight of the fluid) displaced by the object. Depends on volume of object and density of air (fluid) outside. F buoyancy ? F buoyancy Weight Balloon + He + string Calculating F buoyancy for Balloon #2 : density of He (in boulder) = 0.17 kg/m3 density of air in boulder = 1 kg/m3 r = 0.3m Why is #3 true? Because we know that if our object is just a pocket (or cube) of air, then Fbuoyancy will exactly balance it’s weight and the pocket of air will feel no net force. a) b) c) d) e) 17 2.3 N 9.8 N 1.1 N 3.2 N 22.8N 18 3 #2 He a) b) c) d) e) 800 kg 2g 70 g 400 g 2 kg F buoyancy = ? #2 He Weight balloon + string = 0.2 N F buoyancy = ? Weight balloon + string = 0.2 N Weight He = ? Weight He = ? N Max load = ? Max load = ? N Calculating F buoyancy for Balloon #2 : density of He (in boulder) = 0.17 kg/m3 density of air in boulder = 1 kg/m3 r = 0.3m, Fbuoyancy = ? If the balloon and string have a weight of 0.2 N, what is the maximum mass I can tie to the string and the balloon still just about lifts off? 19 20 How can we lift stuff with a balloon? Air vs. Helium Balloon What if we make a sealed light-weight Aluminum (Al) foil balloon… remove air inside volume/balloon? Could we carry our selves? BIG VOLUME Lots air displaced BIG F buoyancy? SAME VOLUMES Nope… Squashed by atmosphere (just like drum!) AIR HELIUM How does buoyancy force for each balloon compare? a) Fbuoyancy greater for air filled balloon b) Fbuoyancy greater for helium filled balloon c) Fbuoyancy the same for each d) You can’t tell What could you do that could make this work? a. make out of really heavy metal to hold against air pressure b. fill with water so would not compress in c. fill with some other gas that is lighter than air. d. fill with air e. something else 21 22 Air vs. Helium Balloon SAME VOLUMES AIR Air vs. Helium Balloon HELIUM SAME VOLUMES How does the PRESSURE inside each balloon compare? a. Pressure greater inside air filled balloon b. Pressure greater inside He filled balloon c. Pressure the same in each d. Can’t tell AIR HELIUM How do the number of particles (He atoms or air molecules) compare in each balloon? a. More particles in air filled balloon b. More particles in He filled balloon c. Same number of particles in each d. Can’t tell 23 24 4 Air vs. Helium Balloon AIR What about a hot air balloon? Why does a hot air balloon rise? a) Hotter air inside balloon has higher pressure than colder air outside b) Density of air is smaller inside balloon c) He is injected inside balloon d) Mass of air molecule decreases when it gets hotter HELIUM 25 Cold air balloon Will it sink or will it float? If I stick a balloon full of air into liquid nitrogen and wait for some time, then …. (Liquid Nitrogen temp = 77 K) a. b. c. d. e. number of molecules inside balloon will be less pressure inside the balloon will be lower volume will decrease and number density of molecules will be higher b and c a and b 27 It have a plastic ball and a large tub of water. What property of the ball determines whether it will sink or float in the water? a) Volume of the ball b) Mass of the ball c) Density of the ball d) Color of the ball e) Surface roughness of the ball 28 I have a plastic ball of density 950 kg/m3 First I drop it in a bucket of water (density = 1000 kg/m 3) and then I drop it in a bucket of oil (density = 900 kg/m3) Which statement below is correct: a) b) c) d) e) It sinks in both It floats in both Sinks in oil, floats in water Floats in oil, Sinks in water Cannot determine without more information. 29 5
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