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Done by: Dexter Augustus
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VOLUME

Jan 08, 2016

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VOLUME. Done by: Dexter Augustus. Objectives. Properties of plane shapes. Measuring volume. Volumes of Cuboids. The Cross-sectional Area. The Volume of a Cylinder. The Volume of a Triangular prism. Volume of a Cone. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: VOLUME

Done by: Dexter Augustus

Page 2: VOLUME

Properties of plane shapesMeasuring volume

Volumes of Cuboids

The Cross-sectional AreaThe Volume of a CylinderThe Volume of a Triangular prism

Volume of a Cone

Objectives

Page 3: VOLUME

TriangleA triangle has three sides and three anglesThe three angles always add up to 180Equilateral, Isosceles and Scalene are three special names given to triangles that tell how many sides (or angles) are equal.

There can be 3, 2 or no equal sides/angles:

Page 4: VOLUME

Equilateral TriangleThree equal sides 

Three equal angles, always 60°

Isosceles TriangleTwo equal sides 

Two equal angles

Scalene TriangleNo equal sides 

No equal angles

Page 5: VOLUME

Triangles can also have names that tell you what type of angle is inside:

Acute TriangleAll angles are less than 90°

Obtuse TriangleHas an angle more than 90°

Page 6: VOLUME

The area is half of the base times height."b" is the distance along the base"h" is the height (measured at right angles to the base)

Area = ½bh

Area-

The formula works for all triangles.Another way of writing the formula is bh/2

Page 7: VOLUME

Quadrilateral just means "four sides" 

(quad means four, lateral means side).

Any four-sided shape is a Quadrilateral.

But the sides have to be straight, and it

has to be 2-dimensional.

Page 8: VOLUME

Four sides (or edges)Four vertices (or corners).The interior angles add up to 360 degrees:Try drawing a quadrilateral, and measure the angles. They should add to 360°

Page 9: VOLUME

 

The RhombusA rhombus is a four-sided shape where all sides have equal length.Also opposite sides are parallel and opposite angles are equal.Another interesting thing is that the diagonals (dashed lines in second figure) of a rhombus bisect each other at right angles.

 

A rectangle is a four-sided shape where every angle is a right angle (90°).Also opposite sides are parallel and of equal length.

Page 10: VOLUME

The volume of a solid is the amount of space inside the solid.

Consider the cylinder below:

If we were to fill the cylinder with water the volume would be the amount of water the cylinder could hold:

Page 11: VOLUME

Volume is measured in cubic centimetres (also called centimetre cubed).

Here is a cubic centimetre

It is a cube which measures 1cm in all directions.1cm

1cm1cm

We will now see how to calculate the volume of various shapes.

Page 12: VOLUME

14cm5 cm

7cm

4cm

6cm

10cm

3cm

4cm

ZZ

8m

5m

Page 13: VOLUME

Look at the cuboid below:

10cm

3cm

4cm

We must first calculate the area of the base of the cuboid:

The base is a rectangle measuring 10cm by 3cm:

3cm

10cm

Page 14: VOLUME

10cm

3cm

4cm

3cm

10cm

Area of a rectangle = length x breadth

Area = 10 x 3

Area = 30cm2

We now know we can place 30 centimetre squares on the base of the cuboid. But we can also place 30 cubic centimetres on the base:

Page 15: VOLUME

10cm

3cm

4cm

We have now got to find how many layers of 1cm cubes we can place in the cuboid:

We can fit in 4 layers.

Volume = 30 x 4

Volume = 120cm3

That means that we can place 120 of our cubes measuring a centimetre in all directions inside our cuboid.

Page 16: VOLUME

10cm

3cm

4cm

We have found that the volume of the cuboid is given by:

Volume = 10 x 3 x 4 = 120cm3

This gives us our formula for the volume of a cuboid:

Volume = Length x Breadth x Height

V=LBH for short.

Page 17: VOLUME

Calculate the volumes of the cuboids below:

(1)

14cm5 cm

7cm(2)

3.4cm

3.4cm

3.4cm

(3)

8.9 m

2.7m

3.2m

490cm3

39.3cm3

76.9 m3

Page 18: VOLUME

When we calculated the volume of the cuboid :

10cm

3cm

4cm

We found the area of the base : This is the Cross Sectional Area.

The Cross section is the shape that is repeated throughout the volume.We then calculated how many layers of cross section made up the volume.This gives us a formula for calculating other volumes:

Volume = Cross Sectional Area x Length.

Page 19: VOLUME

For the solids below identify the cross sectional area required for calculating the volume:

Circle

(2)

Right Angled Triangle.

(3)

Pentagon

(4)A2

A1

Rectangle & Semi Circle.

(1)

Page 20: VOLUME

Consider the cylinder below:

4cm

6cm

It has a height of 6cm .

What is the size of the radius ?2cm

Volume = cross section x heightWhat shape is the cross section?Circle

Calculate the area of the circle:A = r 2

A = 3.14 x 2 x 2A = 12.56 cm2

Calculate the volume:V = r 2 x hV = 12.56 x 6V = 75.36 cm3

The formula for the volume of a cylinder is:

V = r 2 h

r = radius h = height.

Page 21: VOLUME

Consider the triangular prism below:

Volume = Cross Section x HeightWhat shape is the cross section ?Triangle.Calculate the area of the triangle:

5cm

8cm

5cmA = ½ x base x heightA = 0.5 x 5 x 5 A = 12.5cm2

Calculate the volume:Volume = Cross Section x Length

V = 12.5 x 8V = 100 cm3

The formula for the volume of a triangular prism is :

V = ½ b h l

B= base h = height l = length

Page 22: VOLUME

Calculate the volume of the shapes below:

(1)

16cm

14cm

(2)

3m

4m

5m

(3)

6cm12cm

8m

2813.4cm3

30m3

288cm3

Page 23: VOLUME

Calculate the volume of the shape below:

20m

23m

16m

12m

Calculate the cross sectional area:

A1A2

Area = A1 + A2Area = (12 x 16) + ( ½ x (20 –12) x 16)

Area = 192 + 64

Area = 256m2

Calculate the volume:

Volume = Cross sectional area x length.

V = 256 x 23

V = 2888m3

Page 24: VOLUME

Calculate the volume of the shape below:

12cm 18cm

10cm

Calculate the cross sectional area:

A2

A1

Area = A1 + A2Area = (12 x 10) + ( ½ x x 6 x 6 )Area = 120 +56.52Area = 176.52cm2

Calculate the volume.

Volume = cross sectional area x LengthV = 176.52 x 18 V = 3177.36cm3

Example 2.

Page 25: VOLUME

18m

22m

14m

11m(1)

23cm 32cm

17cm

(2)

4466m3

19156.2cm3

Page 26: VOLUME

Consider the cylinder and cone shown below:

The diameter (D) of the top of the cone and the cylinder are equal.

D D

The height (H) of the cone and the cylinder are equal.

H H

If you filled the cone with water and emptied it into the cylinder, how many times would you have to fill the cone to completely fill the cylinder to the top ?

3 times. This shows that the cylinder has three times the volume of a cone with the same height and radius.

Page 27: VOLUME

The experiment on the previous slide allows us to work out the formula for the volume of a cone:

The formula for the volume of a cylinder is : V = r 2 h

We have seen that the volume of a cylinder is three times more than that of a cone with the same diameter and height .

The formula for the volume of a cone is:

hr π3

1V 2

h

r

r = radius h = height

Page 28: VOLUME

Calculate the volume of the cones below:

hr π3

1V 2

13m

18m(2)

9663.143

1V

9m

6m(1)

hr π3

1V 2

139914.33

1V

31102.14mV 3339.12mV

Page 29: VOLUME

Please click me to watch video!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vZPeEBigUpk

Click here for quiz

Click here for crossword

puzzle

Page 30: VOLUME

lb

h

V = l b h

r

h

V = r 2 h

b

l

h

V = ½ b h l hr π3

1V 2

h

r

Page 31: VOLUME

This is the end of the lesson!!