How To Calculate The Force Of Water Exerted On A Full Tank

  • Thread starter Thread starter tomtomtom1
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Force Tank Water
AI Thread Summary
To calculate the force exerted by water on a full rectangular tank, one must consider that pressure increases with depth, necessitating an understanding of how to integrate pressure over the area of the tank wall. The pressure at any depth can be calculated using the formula Pressure = Density * Gravity * Depth. For the long side of the tank, the total force can be derived from the average pressure across the height, which can be simplified without full integration by recognizing the shape of the pressure distribution graph. The discussion emphasizes that while integration can provide a precise answer, it is not strictly necessary for this problem. Ultimately, understanding the relationship between pressure, depth, and area is key to solving for the force on the tank walls.
tomtomtom1
Messages
160
Reaction score
8
Homework Statement
To Calculate Force of Water Acting On A Full Tank Of Water
Relevant Equations
Pressure = Density * Gravity * Depth Below Water Surface
Pressure = Force / Area
Hello Community

I was hoping someone could me with the following question:-

A rectangular tank contains water.
It is 12m long, 4m wide and has a height of 3m.
If the tank is full determine:-
1) The Force on the long side
2) The Force on the short side
3) The moment at the bottom of the long side and its centre.

I am just tying to figure out part 1 for now.

Trying to visualise the problem I would say that the area of the long side of the tank wall is 12m * 3m = 36m^2, and the question is asking how much force is the water exerting on this wall.

I know/worked out the following:-
- Water Density = 1000kg/m^3
- Pressure = Density * Gravity * Depth Below Water Surface
- Pressure = Force / Area
- The total volume of the water in the tank is 12 * 4 * 3 = 144.
- Using the equation Density = Mass/Volume, I can say that 1000 = Mass/144, by rearranging I get Mass to equal 144000kg.

I don't really know where to go from here, I have been told that the answer is 529.2kN - but I want to know how to get to the answer.
I am struggling because I know pressure increases with depth so my gut feeling is that some form of integration is needed but I have been told that integration can be used but is not needed.

Can someone help?

Thank you.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
You need to do an integral because the pressure (force per unit area) depends on the distance from the surface. Go with your gut feeling, get the answer, then see if you can get the same answer without integration.
 
kuruman said:
You need to do an integral because the pressure (force per unit area) depends on the distance from the surface. Go with your gut feeling, get the answer, then see if you can get the same answer without integration.
I would even know what to integrate?
 
Apologies, was meant to say I wouldn't even know what to integrate?
 
Consider a horizontal strip at depth ##y## of width ##dy##.
1. What is the contribution ##dF## of that strip to the total force? (Pretend that ##dy## is small enough so that the pressure is the same over the strip.)
2. Add all such contributions to find the total force on the side.
 
Would you be able to find the force on the bottom surface?
The pressure should be constant there.

Then contemplate, say for the long side, where the force varies with depth.
What is the pressure at the top surface?
What is the pressure at the bottom surface?
( You have already said that Pressure = ρgh so that should be easy )
Then, how should the force on the surface vary on an incremental area as one moves down the surface?
Then how can I add up all these forces to obtain the whole force on the surface.

And you have heard correctly.
For this problem to find the forces on the sides, integration is not needed.
 
tomtomtom1 said:
I have been told that integration can be used but is not needed.
If you draw a graph of pressure against depth, what shape do you get? The total force will be the area under it,
 
haruspex said:
If you draw a graph of pressure against depth, what shape do you get? The total force will be the area under it,
In a graph of pressure (expressed in N/m2) against depth (expressed in m), the area under the curve comes out in units of N/m, not N. Setting aside the dimensional mismatch, what non-calculus argument identifies the "area under the curve" to the quantity sought without using the idea of adding infinitesimal contributions to obtain the whole? It seems to me that "because the integral can be easily found as the area of a simple geometrical shape" is insufficient justification to say that no integration is needed.
 
Back
Top