BackFluids: Physics for Life Sciences (Chapter 9) - Structured Study Notes
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Fluids in Physics for Life Sciences
Introduction
This chapter explores the physical principles governing fluids, with a focus on biological and life-science applications. Topics include properties of fluids, pressure, buoyancy, surface tension, and fluid dynamics, all of which are essential for understanding processes in living organisms.
Phases of Matter
Classification of Matter
Solid: Definite volume and shape.
Liquid: Definite volume, but not a definite shape.
Gas: Neither definite volume nor shape; unconfined.
Liquids and gases are both considered fluids because they can flow and take the shape of their container.
Properties of Fluids
Definition and Characteristics
A fluid is a collection of molecules held together by weak cohesive forces and by container walls.
Fluids take the shape of their container and can flow.
Both liquids and gases are fluids.
Volume and Density
Key Concepts
Volume (V): Amount of space a system occupies. SI unit: cubic meter (m3).
Mass Density (ρ): Characterizes a substance, defined as:
SI units: kg/m3; 1 g/cm3 = 1000 kg/m3 = 1 kg/L.
Mass and volume characterize a specific piece; density characterizes the substance itself.
Density Table
Substance | ρ (kg/m3) |
|---|---|
Helium gas (20°C) | 0.166 |
Air (20°C) | 1.20 |
Water (4°C) | 1000 |
Seawater | 1030 |
Blood (whole) | 1060 |
Mercury | 13,600 |
Additional info: For solids and liquids, density is relatively insensitive to pressure and temperature. For gases, density changes markedly with pressure and temperature, as described by the ideal gas law:
where M is the molar mass.
Specific Gravity
Definition
Specific gravity (SG): Ratio of a substance's density to that of water at 4°C.
Dimensionless quantity.
Pressure in Fluids
Definition and Units
Pressure (p): Ratio of force to area over which the force is exerted.
SI unit: Pascal (Pa) = N/m2
Other units: psi, atm, bar, torr
Causes of Pressure
Gravitational contribution: Gravity pulls down on the fluid.
Thermal contribution: Collisions of molecules with container walls.
Atmospheric Pressure
Atmospheric pressure decreases with altitude.
Standard atmosphere: 1 atm = 101,300 Pa.
Pressure in Liquids (Hydrostatic Pressure)
Pressure is the same in all directions at a given depth for a fluid at rest.
Hydrostatic pressure is given by:
Where is the pressure at the surface, is density, is acceleration due to gravity, and is depth.
Pascal's Principle
Statement and Application
If the pressure at one point in an incompressible fluid is changed, the pressure at every other point changes by the same amount.
Application: Hydraulic lift
Gauge Pressure
Definition
Gauge pressure (pg): Pressure in excess of atmospheric pressure.
Hydrostatic gauge pressure:
Measuring Pressure
Devices
Barometer: Measures atmospheric pressure using a column of mercury.
Manometer: Measures gas pressure, often as gauge pressure.
Barometer equation:
Properties of Liquids in Hydrostatic Equilibrium
Key Points
Connected liquid rises to the same height in all open regions.
Pressure is the same at all points on a horizontal line in a connected liquid.
Pressure depends only on depth, not container shape.
Life-Science Applications of Fluid Physics
Examples
Circulatory and vascular systems
Support and size limits of organisms
Swimming organisms
Water striders walking on water
Strategy for Solving Hydrostatics Problems
Draw a simple picture, indicating all features affecting pressure.
Determine the pressure at surfaces (open to air, in contact with gas, or closed surface).
Draw a horizontal line; pressure is the same at any point along this line in a connected fluid.
Summary Table: Pressure Units
Unit | Value |
|---|---|
Pascal (Pa) | 1 N/m2 |
psi | 6.89 × 103 Pa |
atm | 1.01 × 105 Pa |
bar | 1.00 × 105 Pa |
torr | 133 Pa |
Example Problems
Comparing densities of broken glass pieces: Density remains the same regardless of size.
Hydraulic lift: Calculating platform diameter required to lift a car using Pascal's principle.
Additional info: These notes cover the foundational concepts of fluid mechanics as applied to life sciences, including biological systems and practical measurement techniques.