Designing a Coke Bottle Submarine Experiment

  • Context: Undergrad 
  • Thread starter Thread starter prime-factor
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Submarine
Join the discussion
Ask a follow-up here, or get your own question answered by working scientists, mathematicians and engineers — people, not an autocomplete.
Real named experts · corrections over time · the nuance an AI answer skips
1 replies · 5K views
prime-factor
Messages
74
Reaction score
0
I am designing an experiment in which a plastic coke bottle will be made to float, subsurface, sink, and return to the water's surface by external manipulation. (depth of 1 meter)

The way I want to do this is using three syringes and fish-tank tubing to control the volume(s) of air in the plastic bottle. In addition, I will need to add weight to the bottle to keep it sturdy, and take into account maybe a ballast tank type design incorporated.

The overall aim of this is to measure the acceleration of the bottle coming up (what i'll measure), compare to what it should be, using the appropriate equations.

Since constructing this plastic bottle submarine is a big part of what I am doing, I am wondering if there is a better method of controlling the volume of air other than syringes.

My other question is whether it would be wiser to use a small bottle (1L or 2L) or a large bottle (3L or 4L) and what might be some of the pros and cons of each.

Thanks in advance.
 
on Phys.org
If I understand you correctly, you're going to use the syringes as vacuum pumps. That should work okay if they're of large enough capacity and you don't have sealing problems with the air lines.
You'll probably have to calibrate your ballast by sucking out as much air as possible and then see how much you have to add to make the thing sink. (It won't without added weight.)
The size of bottle to use is up to you, but it probably shouldn't be much more than the volume of the syringes. Otherwise the percentage of the air that you can remove might be too small to do what you want to.