Properties of Solids & Liquids
Apply concepts from Properties of Solids & Liquids to problem-solving. Focus on numerical practice and real-world applications.
Concept Core
Elasticity describes a material's ability to resist and recover from deformation.
Stress is the restoring force per unit area: = F/A [] (Pa = N/), where F is the force (N) and A is the cross-sectional area (). Stress can be tensile/compressive (normal to surface) or shear (tangential to surface).
Strain is the fractional deformation (dimensionless): longitudinal strain = -L/L, volumetric strain = -V/V, and shear strain = tan() ≈ for small angles. Hooke's law states that stress is proportional to strain within the elastic limit, with the constant of proportionality being the elastic modulus.
Three moduli characterise different deformation types.
Young's modulus Y = (F/A)/(-L/L) = FL/(A -L) [] (Pa) governs linear stretching.
Bulk modulus B = -V(dP/dV) [] (Pa) governs volume change, with compressibility = 1/B.
Shear modulus (modulus of rigidity) G = shear stress/shear strain [] (Pa). The stress-strain curve progresses through: proportional limit, elastic limit, yield point, ultimate stress (maximum), and breaking point. The region before the elastic limit is elastic (reversible); beyond it is plastic (permanent).
Pascal's law states that pressure applied to a confined fluid transmits equally in all directions.
The hydraulic press uses this: = .
Pressure at depth h in a fluid: P = + g h [] (Pa).
For fluid dynamics, the equation of continuity = ensures mass conservation in incompressible flow.
Bernoulli's equation P + + g h = constant [] (Pa) relates pressure, velocity, and height. A key consequence: higher velocity means lower pressure, explaining airplane lift and the Venturi effect.
Viscosity is internal friction in fluids.
Newton's viscous force law: F = A (dv/dx), where is the coefficient of viscosity [] (Pa s).
Stokes' law gives the drag on a sphere: F = 6 r v, where r is radius (m) and v is speed (m/s).
Terminal velocity is reached when weight equals buoyancy plus drag: = ( - )g / (9 ) [] (m/s), where is sphere density (kg/) and is fluid density (kg/). Critically, is proportional to — doubling the radius quadruples the terminal velocity.
Surface tension S = F/L = Energy/Area [] (N/m).
Capillary rise: h = 2S cos() / ( g r), where is the contact angle, r is tube radius (m).
Excess pressure inside a liquid drop: -P = 2S/R (one surface).
Inside a soap bubble: -P = 4S/R (two free surfaces). Students must never confuse these — bubbles have twice the excess pressure of drops.
Thermal expansion coefficients relate as (volume) = 3 (linear).
Heat conduction follows Fourier's law: Q/t = KA(-T)/L, where K is thermal conductivity [] (W ).
Stefan-Boltzmann radiation law: P = A , where = 5.67 x W .
Solved Numerical 1: Steel wire, length L = 2 m, area A = 1 = 1 x , load F = 100 N, Y = 2 x Pa.
Extension: -L = FL/(AY) = (100)(2) / ((1 x )(2 x )) = 200 / (2 x ) = 1 x m = 1 mm.
Dimensional check: [N][m]/([][Pa]) = [M L ][L] / ([][M ]) = [M ]/[M L ] = [L].
Solved Numerical 2: Capillary rise: h = 10 cm = 0.1 m, r = 0.2 mm = 2 x m, = 0 degrees (cos = 1), = 1000 kg/, g = 10 m/.
S = h r g / (2 cos ) = (0.1)(2 x )(1000)(10) / (2 x 1) = 0.2 / 2 = 0.1 N/m = 100 mN/m.
Solved Numerical 3: Steel ball in glycerine: r = 2 mm = 2 x m, = 7800 kg/, = 1260 kg/, = 0.8 Pa s, g = 10 m/.
Terminal velocity: = ( - )g / (9 ) = 2(2 x )2(7800 - 1260)(10) / (9 x 0.8) = 2(4 x )(6540)(10) / 7.2 = 2(4 x )(65400) / 7.2 = 0.5232 / 7.2 = 0.0727 m/s = 7.27 cm/s.
Dimensional formula: [][M ][L ] / [M ] = [M ] x [] / [M ] = [L ].
The key testable concept is the distinction between excess pressure in a liquid drop (2S/R, one surface) and a soap bubble (4S/R, two surfaces), and terminal velocity's proportionality to .
Key Testable Concept
The key testable concept is the distinction between excess pressure in a liquid drop (2S/R, one surface) and a soap bubble (4S/R, two surfaces), and terminal velocity's proportionality to r^2.
Comparison Tables
A) Elastic Moduli
| Modulus | Type of Stress | Type of Strain | Formula | Dimensional Formula | SI Unit |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Young's (Y) | Normal (tensile/compressive) | Longitudinal (-L/L) | Y = FL/(A -L) | [] | Pa |
| Bulk (B) | Normal (all-round pressure) | Volumetric (-V/V) | B = -V dP/dV | [] | Pa |
| Shear (G) | Tangential (shear) | Shear angle () | G = shear stress / | [] | Pa |
B) Fluid Dynamics Formulae
| Equation | Formula | Variables Defined | Application |
|---|---|---|---|
| Continuity | = | A: cross-section area (), v: flow speed (m/s) | Incompressible fluid flow through varying pipe |
| Bernoulli's | P + + gh = const | P: pressure (Pa), : density (kg/), h: height (m) | Airplane lift, Venturi meter, spray gun |
| Stokes' law | F = 6 r v | : viscosity (Pa s), r: radius (m), v: speed (m/s) | Viscous drag on falling sphere |
| Terminal velocity | = (-)g/(9eta) | : sphere density, : fluid density (kg/) | Sphere settling in viscous fluid |
| Poiseuille's flow | Q = -P/(8 L) | Q: volume flow rate (/s), L: pipe length | Flow rate through capillary tube |
C) Surface Tension
| Phenomenon | Formula | Variables | Key Point |
|---|---|---|---|
| Drop excess pressure | -P = 2S/R | S: surface tension (N/m), R: radius (m) | ONE free surface |
| Bubble excess pressure | -P = 4S/R | S: surface tension, R: radius | TWO free surfaces (inner + outer) |
| Capillary rise | h = 2S cos()/( g r) | : contact angle, r: tube radius | h > 0 for < 90 (rise), h < 0 for > 90 (depression) |
| Surface energy | E = S x -A | -A: increase in surface area | Work done = S x change in area |
D) Heat Transfer
| Mode | Law | Formula | Variables | SI Unit of Key Quantity |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Conduction | Fourier's law | Q/t = KA(-T)/L | K: thermal conductivity, A: area, L: thickness | K: W [] |
| Convection | Newton's law of cooling | dT/dt = -k(T - ) | k: cooling constant, : surroundings temp | k: |
| Radiation | Stefan-Boltzmann law | P = A | = 5.67 x W | : W [] |
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