Complete Guide to Volume of a Cylinder
Master Cylinder Volume Calculations! This comprehensive guide covers everything you need to know about cylinders including volume formulas, surface area, capacity calculations in gallons and liters, hollow cylinders, cylindrical tanks, and the cylindrical shell method. Perfect for students, engineers, and anyone working with cylindrical containers, tanks, and vessels.
Cylinder Volume Calculator
What is a Cylinder?
A cylinder is a three-dimensional geometric shape with two parallel circular bases connected by a curved surface. The most common type is the right circular cylinder, where the sides are perpendicular to the bases.
Key Components of a Cylinder:
- Radius (r): Distance from the center to the edge of the circular base
- Diameter (d): Distance across the circular base through the center (\( d = 2r \))
- Height (h): Perpendicular distance between the two circular bases
- Axis: The line joining the centers of the two circular bases
- Curved Surface: The lateral surface connecting the two bases
Cylinder Volume Formula
The volume of a cylinder represents the amount of three-dimensional space enclosed within its boundaries. It is measured in cubic units.
Primary Volume Formula:
\[ V = \pi r^2 h \]
Where:
- \( V \) = Volume of the cylinder (cubic units)
- \( r \) = Radius of the circular base
- \( h \) = Height of the cylinder
- \( \pi \) = Pi (approximately 3.14159)
Alternative Formula Using Diameter:
\[ V = \frac{\pi d^2 h}{4} \]
Volume Formula Using Base Area:
\[ V = A_{\text{base}} \times h \]
Where \( A_{\text{base}} = \pi r^2 \)
Derivation of Cylinder Volume Formula
The volume formula can be understood by thinking of a cylinder as a stack of circular discs:
Step-by-Step Derivation:
- A cylinder consists of infinite thin circular discs stacked vertically
- Each disc has area = \( \pi r^2 \)
- If we stack these discs to height \( h \), the total volume is:
\[ V = \text{(Area of base)} \times \text{(Height)} \]
- Substituting the base area:
\[ V = \pi r^2 \times h = \pi r^2 h \]
Alternative Derivation Using Integration:
Consider the cylinder with axis along the z-axis from \( z = 0 \) to \( z = h \):
\[ V = \int_0^h \pi r^2 \, dz = \pi r^2 \int_0^h dz = \pi r^2 h \]
Surface Area of a Cylinder
The surface area of a cylinder includes the curved lateral surface and the two circular bases.
Total Surface Area:
\[ A_{\text{total}} = 2\pi r^2 + 2\pi rh \]
\[ A_{\text{total}} = 2\pi r(r + h) \]
Curved (Lateral) Surface Area:
\[ A_{\text{curved}} = 2\pi rh \]
Area of Two Circular Bases:
\[ A_{\text{bases}} = 2\pi r^2 \]
Components:
- \( 2\pi r^2 \) = Combined area of top and bottom circles
- \( 2\pi rh \) = Area of the curved surface (rectangle when unrolled)
Hollow Cylinder Volume
A hollow cylinder is a cylinder with a cylindrical hole through its center, like a pipe or tube.
Hollow Cylinder Volume Formula:
\[ V = \pi h(R^2 - r^2) \]
\[ V = \pi h(R + r)(R - r) \]
Where:
- \( R \) = Outer radius
- \( r \) = Inner radius
- \( h \) = Height
Derivation:
Volume of hollow cylinder = Volume of outer cylinder - Volume of inner cylinder
\[ V = \pi R^2 h - \pi r^2 h = \pi h(R^2 - r^2) \]
Hollow Cylinder Surface Area:
\[ A = 2\pi h(R + r) + 2\pi(R^2 - r^2) \]
Cylinder Volume in Different Units
Volume in Gallons
Converting Cubic Units to Gallons:
From Cubic Inches:
\[ \text{Gallons} = \frac{V_{\text{in}^3}}{231} \]
(1 US gallon = 231 cubic inches)
From Cubic Feet:
\[ \text{Gallons} = V_{\text{ft}^3} \times 7.48052 \]
(1 cubic foot = 7.48052 US gallons)
Direct Formula (radius and height in inches):
\[ \text{Gallons} = \frac{\pi r^2 h}{231} \]
Volume in Liters
Converting to Liters:
From Cubic Centimeters:
\[ \text{Liters} = \frac{V_{\text{cm}^3}}{1000} \]
(1 liter = 1000 cm³)
From Cubic Meters:
\[ \text{Liters} = V_{\text{m}^3} \times 1000 \]
(1 m³ = 1000 liters)
Direct Formula (radius and height in cm):
\[ \text{Liters} = \frac{\pi r^2 h}{1000} \]
Cylindrical Tank Volume and Capacity
Cylindrical tanks are commonly used for storing liquids like water, oil, and chemicals. Calculating their capacity is essential for engineering and practical applications.
Vertical Cylindrical Tank
Tank Capacity Formula:
\[ \text{Capacity} = \pi r^2 h \]
Practical Considerations:
- Account for wall thickness if calculating internal capacity
- Consider freeboard (safety margin at top) in design
- For internal capacity, use internal radius and height
Horizontal Cylindrical Tank
For a horizontal cylinder partially filled with liquid:
Volume of Liquid (Partial Fill):
When filled to height \( h \) from the bottom:
\[ V = L \left[ r^2 \cos^{-1}\left(\frac{r-h}{r}\right) - (r-h)\sqrt{2rh - h^2} \right] \]
Where:
- \( L \) = Length of the cylinder
- \( r \) = Radius of the cylinder
- \( h \) = Height of liquid from the bottom
Full Horizontal Tank Volume:
\[ V = \pi r^2 L \]
Volume Formulas for Related Shapes
Comparison: Cylinder, Cone, and Sphere
Shape | Volume Formula | Surface Area | Relationship |
---|---|---|---|
Cylinder | \( V = \pi r^2 h \) | \( A = 2\pi r(r + h) \) | Base shape |
Cone | \( V = \frac{1}{3}\pi r^2 h \) | \( A = \pi r(r + l) \) | ⅓ of cylinder |
Sphere | \( V = \frac{4}{3}\pi r^3 \) | \( A = 4\pi r^2 \) | Different formula |
Hemisphere | \( V = \frac{2}{3}\pi r^3 \) | \( A = 3\pi r^2 \) | Half of sphere |
Rectangular Prism vs Cylinder
Rectangular Prism
Volume:
\[ V = l \times w \times h \]
Where \( l \) = length, \( w \) = width, \( h \) = height
Cylinder
Volume:
\[ V = \pi r^2 h \]
Circular base instead of rectangular base
Cylindrical Shell Method (Calculus)
The cylindrical shell method is a technique in calculus for finding volumes of solids of revolution.
Shell Method Formula:
When rotating a region about the y-axis:
\[ V = \int_a^b 2\pi x f(x) \, dx \]
When rotating about the x-axis:
\[ V = \int_c^d 2\pi y g(y) \, dy \]
Components of a Cylindrical Shell:
- Radius of shell: Distance from axis of rotation to the shell
- Height of shell: Value of the function at that point
- Thickness: Infinitesimal width \( dx \) or \( dy \)
Volume of One Shell:
\[ dV = 2\pi \times \text{(radius)} \times \text{(height)} \times \text{(thickness)} \]
\[ dV = 2\pi x f(x) \, dx \]
Worked Examples
Example 1: Basic Cylinder Volume
Problem: Find the volume of a cylinder with radius 7 cm and height 15 cm.
Solution:
Using \( V = \pi r^2 h \)
\[ V = \pi \times 7^2 \times 15 = \pi \times 49 \times 15 = 735\pi \text{ cm}^3 \]
\[ V \approx 2309.07 \text{ cm}^3 \]
Example 2: Volume from Diameter
Problem: A cylindrical water tank has a diameter of 2 meters and height of 3 meters. Find its capacity in liters.
Solution:
Radius: \( r = \frac{d}{2} = \frac{2}{2} = 1 \) meter
\[ V = \pi r^2 h = \pi \times 1^2 \times 3 = 3\pi \text{ m}^3 \]
\[ V \approx 9.42 \text{ m}^3 \]
Converting to liters: \( 9.42 \times 1000 = 9420 \) liters
Example 3: Finding Height from Volume
Problem: Find the height of a cylinder whose volume is 1.54 m³ and radius is 0.7 m.
Solution:
Using \( V = \pi r^2 h \), solve for \( h \):
\[ h = \frac{V}{\pi r^2} = \frac{1.54}{\pi \times 0.7^2} = \frac{1.54}{\pi \times 0.49} \]
\[ h = \frac{1.54}{1.539} \approx 1 \text{ meter} \]
Example 4: Hollow Cylinder
Problem: A hollow cylinder has an outer radius of 8 cm, inner radius of 6 cm, and height of 10 cm. Find its volume.
Solution:
Using \( V = \pi h(R^2 - r^2) \)
\[ V = \pi \times 10 \times (8^2 - 6^2) = 10\pi \times (64 - 36) = 10\pi \times 28 = 280\pi \]
\[ V \approx 879.65 \text{ cm}^3 \]
Example 5: Volume in Gallons
Problem: Calculate the capacity in gallons of a cylindrical tank with radius 12 inches and height 36 inches.
Solution:
First find volume in cubic inches:
\[ V = \pi r^2 h = \pi \times 12^2 \times 36 = 5184\pi \text{ in}^3 \]
\[ V \approx 16286.02 \text{ in}^3 \]
Convert to gallons (1 gallon = 231 in³):
\[ \text{Gallons} = \frac{16286.02}{231} \approx 70.5 \text{ gallons} \]
Example 6: Cylinder with Spherical Dome
Problem: A cylindrical container has a hemispherical dome on top. If the cylinder has radius 5 m and height 12 m, find the total volume.
Solution:
Volume of cylinder: \( V_{\text{cyl}} = \pi r^2 h = \pi \times 5^2 \times 12 = 300\pi \text{ m}^3 \)
Volume of hemisphere: \( V_{\text{hem}} = \frac{2}{3}\pi r^3 = \frac{2}{3}\pi \times 5^3 = \frac{250\pi}{3} \text{ m}^3 \)
Total volume: \( V = 300\pi + \frac{250\pi}{3} = \frac{900\pi + 250\pi}{3} = \frac{1150\pi}{3} \approx 1204.28 \text{ m}^3 \)
Practice Problems and Worksheets
Volume of Cylinder Practice Questions:
- Basic: Find the volume of a cylinder with radius 4 cm and height 9 cm.
- From Diameter: A cylinder has diameter 14 m and height 20 m. Calculate its volume.
- Find Height: A cylinder has volume 500π cm³ and radius 5 cm. Find its height.
- Find Radius: A cylinder has volume 1000 m³ and height 10 m. Find its radius.
- Hollow Cylinder: A pipe has outer diameter 10 cm, inner diameter 8 cm, and length 50 cm. Find the volume of material.
- Capacity: A cylindrical water tank has radius 1.5 m and height 2.5 m. Find capacity in liters.
- Word Problem: A cylindrical drum has diameter 60 cm and height 80 cm. How many liters of oil can it hold?
- Comparison: Which has greater volume: a cylinder with r=5, h=10 or a cone with r=5, h=30?
Volume Conversion Reference
From | To | Multiply By | Example |
---|---|---|---|
Cubic inches (in³) | US Gallons | 0.004329 | 231 in³ = 1 gallon |
Cubic feet (ft³) | US Gallons | 7.48052 | 1 ft³ = 7.48 gallons |
Cubic centimeters (cm³) | Liters | 0.001 | 1000 cm³ = 1 liter |
Cubic meters (m³) | Liters | 1000 | 1 m³ = 1000 liters |
Liters | US Gallons | 0.264172 | 3.785 liters ≈ 1 gallon |
Cubic yards (yd³) | Cubic feet | 27 | 1 yd³ = 27 ft³ |
Special Cylinder Calculations
Graduated Cylinder Volume
A graduated cylinder is a laboratory instrument used to measure liquid volumes precisely. The meniscus (curved liquid surface) should be read at eye level.
Reading Tips:
- Read at the bottom of the meniscus for most liquids
- Ensure the cylinder is on a level surface
- Position your eye at the same level as the liquid surface
Drum Volume Calculator
Standard drum sizes:
- 55-gallon drum: Most common industrial drum (approximately 208 liters)
- 30-gallon drum: Smaller storage drum (approximately 114 liters)
For a 55-gallon drum with typical dimensions (22.5" diameter, 33.5" height):
Volume = \( \pi \times 11.25^2 \times 33.5 \approx 13,313 \text{ in}^3 \approx 57.6 \text{ gallons} \)
Summary of Key Formulas
Measurement | Formula | Notes |
---|---|---|
Cylinder Volume | \( V = \pi r^2 h \) | Fundamental formula |
Total Surface Area | \( A = 2\pi r(r + h) \) | Includes both bases |
Curved Surface Area | \( A = 2\pi rh \) | Lateral surface only |
Hollow Cylinder | \( V = \pi h(R^2 - r^2) \) | R = outer, r = inner radius |
Volume to Gallons | \( \text{Gal} = \frac{V_{\text{in}^3}}{231} \) | US gallons |
Volume to Liters | \( \text{L} = \frac{V_{\text{cm}^3}}{1000} \) | Metric conversion |
Cylindrical Shell | \( V = \int_a^b 2\pi x f(x) \, dx \) | Calculus method |
Real-World Applications
Common Uses of Cylinder Volume Calculations:
- Water Storage Tanks: Calculating storage capacity for residential and industrial use
- Oil Drums and Barrels: Determining fuel storage capacity
- Pipes and Tubes: Calculating material volume for hollow cylinders
- Chemical Storage: Designing cylindrical vessels for safe chemical storage
- Food Industry: Silo capacity calculations for grain storage
- Construction: Concrete volume calculations for cylindrical columns
- Manufacturing: Rod and wire volume calculations
- Laboratory: Graduated cylinder measurements for experiments
About the Author
Adam
Co-Founder @RevisionTown
Math Expert in various curriculums including IB, AP, GCSE, IGCSE, and more