The chocolate crumb mystery. Explosions ignited by electrostatic discharges (sparks) constitute a serious danger in facilities handling grain or powder. Such an explosion occurred in chocolate crumb powder at a biscuit factory in the 1970s. Workers usually emptied newly delivered sacks of the powder into a loading bin, from which it was blown through electrically grounded plastic pipes to a silo for storage. Somewhere along this route, two conditions for an explosion were met: (1) The magnitude of an electric field became 3.0 × 10 6 N/C or greater, so that electrical breakdown and thus sparking could occur. (2) The energy of a spark was 150 mJ or greater so that it could ignite the powder explosively. Let us check for the first condition in the powder flow through the plastic pipes. Suppose a stream of negatively charged powder was blown through a cylindrical pipe of radius R = 5.0 cm. Assume that the powder and its charge were spread uniformly through the pipe with a volume charge density ρ . (a) using Gauss’ law find an expression for the magnitude of the electric field E → in the pipe as a function of radial distance r from the pipe center, (b) Does E increase or decrease with increasing r ? (c) Is E → directed radially inward or outward? (d) For ρ = 1.1 × 10 −3 C/m 3 (a typical value at the factory), find the maximum E and determine where that maximum field occurs. (e) Could sparking occur, anti if so, where? (The story continues with Problem 70 in Chapter 24.)
The chocolate crumb mystery. Explosions ignited by electrostatic discharges (sparks) constitute a serious danger in facilities handling grain or powder. Such an explosion occurred in chocolate crumb powder at a biscuit factory in the 1970s. Workers usually emptied newly delivered sacks of the powder into a loading bin, from which it was blown through electrically grounded plastic pipes to a silo for storage. Somewhere along this route, two conditions for an explosion were met: (1) The magnitude of an electric field became 3.0 × 10 6 N/C or greater, so that electrical breakdown and thus sparking could occur. (2) The energy of a spark was 150 mJ or greater so that it could ignite the powder explosively. Let us check for the first condition in the powder flow through the plastic pipes. Suppose a stream of negatively charged powder was blown through a cylindrical pipe of radius R = 5.0 cm. Assume that the powder and its charge were spread uniformly through the pipe with a volume charge density ρ . (a) using Gauss’ law find an expression for the magnitude of the electric field E → in the pipe as a function of radial distance r from the pipe center, (b) Does E increase or decrease with increasing r ? (c) Is E → directed radially inward or outward? (d) For ρ = 1.1 × 10 −3 C/m 3 (a typical value at the factory), find the maximum E and determine where that maximum field occurs. (e) Could sparking occur, anti if so, where? (The story continues with Problem 70 in Chapter 24.)
The chocolate crumb mystery. Explosions ignited by electrostatic discharges (sparks) constitute a serious danger in facilities handling grain or powder. Such an explosion occurred in chocolate crumb powder at a biscuit factory in the 1970s. Workers usually emptied newly delivered sacks of the powder into a loading bin, from which it was blown through electrically grounded plastic pipes to a silo for storage. Somewhere along this route, two conditions for an explosion were met: (1) The magnitude of an electric field became 3.0 × 106 N/C or greater, so that electrical breakdown and thus sparking could occur. (2) The energy of a spark was 150 mJ or greater so that it could ignite the powder explosively. Let us check for the first condition in the powder flow through the plastic pipes.
Suppose a stream of negatively charged powder was blown through a cylindrical pipe of radius R = 5.0 cm. Assume that the powder and its charge were spread uniformly through the pipe with a volume charge density ρ. (a) using Gauss’ law find an expression for the magnitude of the electric field
E
→
in the pipe as a function of radial distance r from the pipe center, (b) Does E increase or decrease with increasing r? (c) Is
E
→
directed radially inward or outward? (d) For ρ = 1.1 × 10−3 C/m3 (a typical value at the factory), find the maximum E and determine where that maximum field occurs. (e) Could sparking occur, anti if so, where? (The story continues with Problem 70 in Chapter 24.)
air is pushed steadily though a forced air pipe at a steady speed of 4.0 m/s. the pipe measures 56 cm by 22 cm. how fast will air move though a narrower portion of the pipe that is also rectangular and measures 32 cm by 22 cm
No chatgpt pls will upvote
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