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Title: Principles of Technology/Physics in Context (PT/PIC)


1
Principles of Technology/Physics in Context
(PT/PIC)
  • Chapter 7
  • Work and Energy 4
  • Text p. 135 - 136

2
Principles of Technology/Physics in Context
(PT/PIC)
  • During the lecture assessment questions will be
    asked.
  • The assessment questions will be collected at the
    end of the lecture for grading.

3
Key Objectives
  • At the conclusion of this chapter youll be able
    to
  • Solve problems involving simple machines.
  • List other types of simple machines.

4
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK
  • A simple machine is a mechanical device that
    changes the direction or magnitude of a force.

5
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK
  • In general, they can be defined as the simplest
    mechanisms that use mechanical advantage (also
    called leverage) to multiply force.

6
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK
  • A simple machine uses a single applied force to
    do work against a single load force.
  • Ignoring friction losses, the work done on the
    load is equal to the work done by the applied
    force.

7
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK
  • They can be used to increase the amount of the
    output force, at the cost of a proportional
    decrease in the distance moved by the force.
  • The ratio of the output to the input force is
    called the (Actual) mechanical advantage.
  • MA load / applied force Fout/Fin

8
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK
  • Usually the term refers to the six classical
    simple machines which were defined by Renaissance
    scientists
  • Inclined plane
  • Pulley
  • Lever
  • Wedge
  • Screw
  • Wheel and axle

9
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK
  • They are the elementary "building blocks" of
    which all complicated machines are composed.
  • For example, wheels, levers, and pulleys are all
    used in the mechanism of a bicycle.

10
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK Incline Plane
  • The inclined plane is one of the original six
    simple machines as the name suggests, it is a
    flat surface whose endpoints are at different
    heights.

11
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK Incline Plane
  • By moving an object up an inclined plane rather
    than completely vertical, the amount of force
    required is reduced, at the expense of increasing
    the distance the object must travel.

12
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK Inclined Plane
  • The (Ideal) Mechanical Advantage (MA)of the
    inclined plane if we ignore friction
  • MA length of the plane / the height of the
    plane din/dout

13
Assessment Question 1
  • Calculate the Mechanical Advantage (MA) of an
    incline plane that has a length of 27 m (din) and
    a height of 3 m (dout).
  • MA length / height din/dout
  • MA 27 m / 3 m
  • 3 C. 30
  • 9 D. 81

14
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK Inclined Plane
  • Examples include
  • Ramps, chutes and slides
  • Blades, foils, (wings)
  • Wedges, saws and chisels

15
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK PULLEYS
  • A pulley, also called a sheave or a drum, is a
    mechanism composed of a wheel on an axle or shaft
    that may have a groove between two flanges around
    its circumference.

16
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK PULLEYS
  • A rope, cable, belt, or chain usually runs over
    the wheel and inside the groove, if present.
  • Pulleys are used to change the direction of an
    applied force, transmit rotational motion, or
    realize a mechanical advantage in either a linear
    or rotational system of motion.

17
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK PULLEYS
  • A belt and pulley system is characterized by two
    or more pulleys in common to a belt.
  • This allows for mechanical power, torque, and
    speed to be transmitted across axes and, if the
    pulleys are of differing diameters, a mechanical
    advantage to be realized.

18
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK PULLEYS
  • Two or more pulleys together are called a block
    and tackle.

19
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK PULLEYS
  • Also called block and tackles, rope and pulley
    systems (the rope may be a light line or a strong
    cable) are characterized by the use of one rope
    transmitting a linear motive force (in tension)
    to a load through one or more pulleys for the
    purpose of pulling the load (often against
    gravity.)

20
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK PULLEYS
  • In a system of a single rope and pulleys, when
    friction is neglected, the mechanical advantage
    gained can be calculated by counting the number
    of rope lengths exerting force on the load.
  • Mechanical Advantage Number of ropes pulling on
    Load

21
Assessment Question 2
  • All of the following are true EXCEPT
  • A pulley is composed of a wheel on an axle with a
    rope running over the wheel.
  • Pulleys are used to change the direction of an
    applied force, transmit rotational motion, or
    realize a mechanical advantage .
  • Two or more pulleys together are called a juke
    and high step.
  • In a single rope and pulleys system the
    mechanical advantage is the number of rope
    lengths on the load.

22
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK PULLEYS
  • Since the tension in each rope length is equal to
    the force exerted on the free end of the rope,
    the mechanical advantage is simply equal to the
    number of ropes pulling on the load.
  • Mechanical Advantage Number of ropes pulling on
    Load

23
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK PULLEYS
  • In the above figure, if you are going to suspend
    the weight in the air then you have to apply an
    upward force of 100 pounds to the rope.

24
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK PULLEYS
  • If the rope is 100 feet (30.5 meters) long and
    you want to lift the weight up 100 feet, you have
    to pull in 100 feet of rope to do it.
  • This is simple and obvious.

25
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK PULLEYS
  • The only thing that changes is the direction of
    the force you have to apply to lift the weight.
  • You still have to apply 100 pounds of force to
    keep the weight suspended, and you still have to
    reel in 100 feet of rope in order to lift the
    weight 100 feet.

26
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK PULLEYS
  • You can see that the weight is now suspended by
    two pulleys rather than one.
  • That means the weight is split equally between
    the two pulleys, so each one holds only half the
    weight, or 50 pounds (22.7 kilograms).

27
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK PULLEYS
  • If you want to lift the weight 100 feet higher,
    then you have to reel in twice as much rope 0-
    200 feet of rope must be pulled in.

28
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK PULLEYS
  • This demonstrates a force-distance tradeoff. The
    force has been cut in half but the distance the
    rope must be pulled has doubled

29
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK PULLEYS
  • The following diagram adds a third and fourth
    pulley

30
Assessment Question 3
  • Determine the number of ropes exerting force on a
    2000 N load (Fout) that is lifted with 400 N
    (Fout) of force. 150 m (din) of rope is need to
    lift the load 30 m (dout).
  • MA Number of ropes pulling on Load
  • MA Fout/Fin 2000 N / 400 N
  • MA din/dout 150 m / 30 m
  • 2 C. 5
  • 4 D. 10

31
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK LEVERS
  • In physics, a lever (from French lever, "to
    raise", c.f. a levant) is a rigid object that is
    used with an appropriate fulcrum or pivot point
    to multiply the mechanical force that can be
    applied to another object.
  • This leverage is also termed mechanical
    advantage, and is one example of the principle of
    moments.

32
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK LEVERS
  • Archimedes once said, "Give me a lever long
    enough and a fulcrum on which to place it, and I
    shall move the world."
  • First class levers are similar but not the same
    as second or third class levers, in which the
    fulcrum, resistance, and effort are in different
    locations.

33
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK LEVERS
  • The principle of leverage can be derived using
    Newton's laws of motion, and modern statics.
  • It is important to note that the amount of work
    done is given by force times distance.

34
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK LEVERS
  • To use a lever to lift a certain unit of weight
    with a force of half a unit, the distance from
    the fulcrum to the spot where force is applied
    must be exactly twice that of the distance
    between the weight and the fulcrum.

35
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK LEVERS
  • For example, to cut in half the force required to
    lift a weight resting 1 meter from the fulcrum,
    we would need to apply force 2 meters from the
    other side of the fulcrum.

36
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK LEVERS
  • The amount of work done is always the same and
    independent of the dimensions of the lever (in an
    ideal lever). The lever only allows to trade
    force for distance.

37
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK LEVERS
  • The point where you apply the force is called the
    effort.
  • The effect of applying this force is called the
    load.
  • The load arm and the effort arm are the names
    given to the distances from the fulcrum to the
    load and effort, respectively.

38
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK LEVERS
  • Using these definitions, the Law of the Lever is
  • Load arm x load force effort arm x effort
    force.

39
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK LEVERS
  • If, for example, a 1 gram feather were balanced
    by a one kilogram rock, the feather would be 1000
    times further from the fulcrum than the rock

40
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK LEVERS
  • if a 1 kilogram rock were balanced by another 1
    kilogram rock, the fulcrum would be in the middle.

41
Assessment Question 4
  • Determine the length of the effort arm to balance
    on a 495 kg load (Load Force) with a 55 kg (Fout)
    student if the load is 2 m (load arm) from the
    fulcrum.
  • Load arm x load force effort arm x effort
    force.
  • Effort arm (load arm x load force) / effort
    force
  • Effort arm (2 m x 495 kg) / 55 kg
  • 18 m C. 545 m
  • 99 m D. 2495 m

42
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK LEVERS
  • There are three classes of levers which represent
    variations in the location of the fulcrum and the
    input and output forces.

43
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK 1st Class LEVERS
  • A first-class lever is a lever in which the
    fulcrum is located between the input effort and
    the output load.

44
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK 1st Class LEVERS
  • In operation, a force is applied (by pulling or
    pushing) to a section of the bar, which causes
    the lever to swing about the fulcrum, overcoming
    the resistance force on the opposite side.

45
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK 1st Class LEVERS
  • The fulcrum may be at the center point of the
    lever as in a seesaw or at any point between the
    input and output.

46
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK 1st Class LEVERS
  • Examples
  • Seesaw (also known as a teeter-totter)
  • Trebuchet
  • Crowbar (curved end of it)
  • Hammer Claw, when pulling a nail with the
    hammer's claw
  • Hand trucks are L-shaped but work on the same
    principle, with the axis as a fulcrum
  • Pliers (double lever)
  • Scissors (double lever)
  • Shoehorn (used for putting feet into shoes)
  • Wheel and axle because the wheel's motions
    follows the fulcrum, load arm, and effort arm
    principle.
  • Chopsticks with hand the middle finger acts as a
    pivot. The whole system is a double lever

47
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK 2nd Class LEVERS
  • In a second class lever the input effort is
    located at the end of the bar and the fulcrum is
    located at the other end of the bar, opposite to
    the input, with the output load at a point
    between these two forces

48
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK 2nd Class LEVERS
  • Examples
  • Bottle opener
  • Crowbar (flat end)
  • Curb bit
  • Dental elevator
  • Wheelbarrow
  • Wrench
  • Nutcracker
  • Doorknob (could be a wheel and axle also)
  • Nail clippers, the main body handle exerts the
    incoming force
  • Oar the water is the fulcrum the boat is the
    load and the effort is at the inboard end

49
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK 3rd Class LEVERS
  • For this class of levers, the input effort is
    higher than the output load, which is different
    from second-class levers and some first-class
    levers.

50
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK 3rd Class LEVERS
  • However, the distance moved by the resistance
    (load) is greater than the distance moved by the
    effort.

51
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK 3rd Class LEVERS
  • Since this motion occurs in the same length of
    time, the resistance necessarily moves faster
    than the effort.

52
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK 3rd Class LEVERS
  • Thus, a third-class lever still has its uses in
    making certain tasks easier to do.

53
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK 3rd Class LEVERS
  • In third class levers, effort is applied between
    the output load on one end and the fulcrum on the
    opposite end.

54
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK 3rd Class LEVERS
  • Examples
  • Baseball bat
  • Boat paddle
  • Broom, Hammer
  • Electric gates
  • Fishing rod
  • Hockey stick
  • Human arm
  • Tennis racket
  • Tongs, Tweezers
  • Stapler
  • Mousetrap (Spring-loaded bar type)
  • Shovel (the action of picking or lifting up sand
    or dirt)

55
Assessment Question 5
  • All of the following are true EXCEPT
  • A first-class lever is a lever in which the
    fulcrum is located between the input effort and
    the output load.
  • In a second class lever the input effort is
    located at the end of the bar and the fulcrum is
    located at the other end of the bar, opposite to
    the input, with the output load at a point
    between these two forces
  • In third class levers, effort is applied between
    the output load on one end and the fulcrum on the
    opposite end.
  • For all classes of levers, the input effort is
    higher than the output load.

56
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK WEDGE
  • A wedge is a triangular shaped tool, a compound
    and portable inclined plane, and one of the six
    classical simple machines.

57
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK WEDGE
  • It can be used to separate two objects or
    portions of an object, lift an object, or hold an
    object in place.

58
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK WEDGE
  • It functions by converting a force applied to its
    blunt end into forces perpendicular (normal) to
    its inclined surfaces.

59
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK WEDGE
  • The mechanical advantage of a wedge is given by
    the ratio of the length of its slope to its
    width.

60
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK WEDGE
  • Although a short wedge with a wide angle may do a
    job faster, it requires more force than a long
    wedge with a narrow angle.

61
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK WEDGE
  • The mechanical advantage of a wedge can be
    calculated by dividing the length of the slope by
    the wedge's width
  • Mechanical Advantage length / thickness

62
Assessment Question 6
  • Calculate the Mechanical Advantage (MA) of a
    wedge that has a length of 72 m (din) and a
    thickness of 3 m (dout).
  • MA length / thickness din/dout
  • MA 72 m / 3 m
  • 9 C. 24
  • 15 D. 48

63
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK SCREW
  • A screw is a shaft with a helical groove or
    thread formed on its surface and provision at one
    end to turn the screw.
  • Its main uses are as a threaded fastener used to
    hold objects together, and as a simple machine
    used to translate torque into linear force.

64
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK SCREW
  • It can also be defined as an inclined plane
    wrapped around a shaft.
  • Screws come in a variety of shapes and sizes for
    different purposes.

65
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK SCREW
  • The ratio of threading determines the mechanical
    advantage of the machine.
  • More threading increases the mechanical
    advantage.

66
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK SCREW
  • The vertical distance between two adjacent screw
    threads is called the pitch of a screw.
  • One complete revolution of the screw will move it
    into an object a distance to the pitch of the
    screw.

67
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK SCREW
  • The pitch of any screw can be calculated as
    follows
  • Pitch Number of threads/inch of screw

68
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK SCREW
  • As an example, assume that you place a ruler
    parallel to a screw and count 10 threads in a
    distance of one inch.
  • The pitch of the screw would be 1/10.

69
Assessment Question 7
  • All of the following are true EXCEPT
  • A screw can be defined as an inclined plane
    wrapped around a shaft.
  • More threading on a screw increases the
    mechanical advantage.
  • One complete revolution of the screw will move it
    into an object a distance to the pitch of the
    screw.
  • If a screw has 20 threads per inch the pitch of
    the screw will be 20.

70
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK SCREW
  • The Mechanical Advantage (M.A.) is equal to the
    circumference of the screw divided by the pitch
    of the screw.
  • M.A. circumference/pitch

71
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK SCREW
  • The Mechanical Advantage (M.A.) is equal to the
    circumference of the screw multiplied by the
    number of threads per unit (inch, cm) of the
    screw.
  • M.A. circumference x (number of threads/ unit
    (inch, cm)

72
Assessment Question 8
  • Calculate the Mechanical Advantage (MA) of a
    screw that as a radius of 0.05 m (r) is and has
    500 threads per meter.
  • MA circumference(number of threads/m)
  • MA 2pr(number of threads/m)
  • MA 2(3.140.05 m)(500 threads/m)
  • 12 C. 160
  • 85 D. 550

73
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK Wheel and Axle
  • The wheel and axle is a simple machine consisting
    of a large wheel rigidly secured to a smaller
    wheel or shaft, called an axle.
  • When either the wheel or axle turns, the other
    part also turns.

74
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK Wheel and Axle
  • One full revolution of either part causes one
    full revolution of the other part.
  • If the wheel turns and the axle remains
    stationary, it is not a wheel and axle machine.

75
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK Wheel and Axle
  • When the force is applied to the wheel in order
    to turn the axle, force is increased and distance
    and speed are decreased.

76
Assessment Question 9
  • All of the following are true EXCEPT
  • The wheel and axle is a simple machine consisting
    of a large wheel rigidly secured to a smaller
    wheel or shaft, called an axle.
  • When either the wheel or axle turns, the other
    part also turns. One full revolution of either
    part causes one full revolution of the other
    part.
  • In wheel and axle machines the wheel turns and
    the axle remains stationary.
  • When the force is applied to the wheel in order
    to turn the axle, force is increased and distance
    and speed are decreased.

77
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK Wheel and Axle
  • The mechanical advantage of a wheel and axle is
    the ratio of the radius of the wheel to the
    radius of the axle. M.A. rwheel/raxle

78
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK Wheel and Axle
  • In the wheel and axle illustrated below, the
    radius of the wheel is five times larger than the
    radius of the axle. M.A. rwheel/raxle 5/1

79
7.4 SIMPLE MACHINES AND WORK Wheel and Axle
  • Therefore, the mechanical advantage is 51 or 5.
  • M.A. rwheel/raxle 5/1 5

80
Conclusion
  • Simple machines provide examples of how work can
    be used to a persons advantage in performing
    such chores as lifting heavy objects and exerting
    large forces that can accomplish a task such as
    cutting through steel.

81
Assessment Question 10
  • Calculate the Mechanical Advantage (MA) of a
    wheel and axle that as an axle radius of 5 inches
    (raxle) and a wheel radius of 55 inches (rwheel).
  • M.A. rwheel/raxle 55/5
  • 11
  • 25
  • 60
  • 275
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