Sunday, July 6, 2014

Volume of a Bottle (Approximate)

This blog entry will deal with finding two formulas (approximate?) for finding the volume of a bottle. This includes plastic water bottles, beer bottles, and carry bottles.

In order to know how to find the volume, let's loom at the basic parts. This was accomplished by a basic search on Google:

Assume that the neck and body are cylinders. The shape of the shoulder is going to vary. First, let's work with a bottle with a linear shoulder, and one with a parabolic shoulder. The volume of the bottle will be measured in three parts.

V = VN + VS + VB

Where:
VN = volume of the neck
VS = volume of the shoulder
VB = volume of the body

Bottle - Linear Shoulder:

Neck: VN = π * r^2 * a

Body: VB = π * q^2 * c

Shoulder:

Let's use the technique of the Method of Discs.

Top Boundary: y = b

Bottom Boundary: y = 0

Left Boundary: x = 0

Right Boundary: x = (r - q)/b * y + q

The line between the points (r, b) and (q, 0).

Slope:
Δy/Δx = (b - 0)/(r - q) = b/(r - q)

Y Intercept
y = b/(r - q) * x + β

Use point (q, 0) (x = q and y = 0)
0 = b/(r - q) * q + β
β = -b/(r - q) * q

Solving for x:
y = b/(r - q) * x - b/(r - q) * q
(r - q)/b * y = b * x - b * q
x = (r - q)/b * y + q

Volume of the Shoulder:
VS =

b
∫ ((r - q)/b * y + q)^2 dy * π =
0

b
∫ (r - q)/b * ((r - q)/b * y + q)^2 dy * (π * b)/(r - q) =
0

b
[ 1/3 * ((r - q)/b * y + q)^3 ] * (π * b)/(r - q) =
0

(π * b)/(3 * (r - q)) * (r^3 - q^3) =


(π * b)/(3 * (r - q)) * (r - q) * (r^2 + r * q + q^2) =

(π * b)/3 * (r^2 + r * q + q^2)

Total Volume - Bottle: Linear Shoulder:

V = VN + VS + VB =

π * r^2 * a + (π * b)/3 * (r^2 + r * q + q^2) + π * q^2 * c


Bottle: Parabolic Shoulder

Neck: VN = π * r^2 * a

Body: VB = π * q^2 * c

Shoulder:

Let's use the technique of the Method of Discs.

Top Boundary: y = b

Bottom Boundary: y = 0

Left Boundary: x = 0

Right Boundary:

Parabolic Equation with roots x = -q and x = q and the curve concave downward, an equation to describe this curve can be:

y = -x^2 + q^2
y + x^2 = q^2
x^2 = q^2 - y (note we have x^2)

Volume of the Shoulder:
VS =

b
∫ q^2 - y dy * π =
0

b
[ q^2 * y - y^3/3 ] * π =
0

π * (b * q^2 - b^3/3)

Total Volume - Parabolic Shoulder:

V = VB + VS + VN =

π * q^2 * c + π * (b * q^2 - b^3/3) + π * r^2 * a


Example:
a = 1 in, b = 1 in, c = 4 in, r = 0.9 in, q = 1.5 in
V = π * 1.5^2 * 4 + π * (1 * 1.5^2 - 1^3/3) + π * 0.9^2 * 1 ≈ 36.84041 in^3


These are two ways to approximate the volume of the bottles.

Eddie

This blog is property of Edward Shore. 2014


HHC 2025 Videos

  HHC 2025 Videos The talks from the HHC 2025 conference in Orlando, Florida are starting to be up on hpcalc’s YouTube page within th...