Liquid in a Rotating Cylinder - Pressure

AI Thread Summary
To calculate the pressure exerted by a fluid in a rotating cylinder, the formula used is p = p_0 + ω²(γr²/2g) - γy, where p_0 is the initial pressure, r is the radius, γ is the fluid's specific weight, ω is the rotational speed, and y is the height above the origin. The units for ω² are radians squared per second squared. The cylinder in question has a diameter of 123mm and contains a 50% air and oil mixture, with oil primarily occupying half of the cylinder's volume. The user seeks to determine the force at the area where a pin acts like a piston at the top of the cylinder. Understanding the distribution of the fluid and applying the pressure formula will help in calculating the necessary force.
kimkat
Messages
3
Reaction score
0
Hello,

I need some help. I have a fluid inside a rotating cylinder being flung out towards the walls and exerting a pressure upwards. How would I calculate this pressure?

Thank you,

Kim
 
Engineering news on Phys.org
kimkat said:
Hello,

I need some help. I have a fluid inside a rotating cylinder being flung out towards the walls and exerting a pressure upwards. How would I calculate this pressure?

Thank you,

Kim

Hi Kim,

The pressure at any point is:

p = p_0 + \omega^2 \frac{\gamma r^2}{2g} - \gamma y

where,

p_0 is the pressure at the origin
r is the radius
gamma is the specific weight of the fluid
omega is the rotational speed
y is the height above the origin

Note the origin is r = 0, y = 0.

Hope this helps.

CS
 
that helps alot! I just have one more question, my units aren't working out correctly, what are the units on omega^2? Thank you!
 
Welcome to PF!

Hi Kim! Welcome to PF! :smile:
kimkat said:
that helps alot! I just have one more question, my units aren't working out correctly, what are the units on omega^2? Thank you!

(have an omega: ω :wink:)

ω, the rotational speed (or angular velocity), is in radians per second. :smile:
 
OK, I've been considering this problem so more and I have some more information to add.

The cylinder has a diameter of 123mm and has a 50% air and oil mixture in it. There is a pin at the top acting like a piston. The area at the pin is where i need to determine the force.

the oil is flung towards the outside of the cylinder, so it would be reasonable to assume that there is oil only in half the can (1/4 of the diameter on each side of the can). How would I calculate this?

Please help!
 
How can you calculate what?
 
Thread 'Turbocharging carbureted petrol 2 stroke engines'
Hi everyone, online I ve seen some images about 2 stroke carbureted turbo (motorcycle derivation engine). Now.. In the past in this forum some members spoke about turbocharging 2 stroke but not in sufficient detail. The intake and the exhaust are open at the same time and there are no valves like a 4 stroke. But if you search online you can find carbureted 2stroke turbo sled or the Am6 turbo. The question is: Is really possible turbocharge a 2 stroke carburated(NOT EFI)petrol engine and...
I need some assistance with calculating hp requirements for moving a load. - The 4000lb load is resting on ball bearing rails so friction is effectively zero and will be covered by my added power contingencies. Load: 4000lbs Distance to travel: 10 meters. Time to Travel: 7.5 seconds Need to accelerate the load from a stop to a nominal speed then decelerate coming to a stop. My power delivery method will be a gearmotor driving a gear rack. - I suspect the pinion gear to be about 3-4in in...
Back
Top