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Volume of 3D Shapes

GCSELevel 6-7Edexcel iGCSE

Volume of 3D Shapes Revision

Volume of 3D Shapes

The volume of a shape is a measure of how much space it occupies. 

Volume of Prisms

The volume of a prism can be calculated as follows:

\text{Volume of prism}=\textbf{\textcolor{red}{area of cross section}} \times \textbf{\textcolor{blue}{length}}

 

This formula can be used for any form of prism, this includes, but is not limited to, cubes, cuboids and cylinders. 

\text{Volume of a Cuboid}=\textbf{\textcolor{red}{Width}} \times \textbf{\textcolor{red}{Height}} \times \textbf{\textcolor{blue}{Length}}

 

This can be simplified for a cube since all three measurements are equal: 

\text{Volume of a Cube}=\textbf{\textcolor{red}{Width}}\textcolor{red}{\boldsymbol{^3}}

 

\text{Volume of a Cylinder}=\textcolor{red}{\boldsymbol{\pi r^2}} \times \textbf{\textcolor{blue}{Length}}

 

Notice the use of \boldsymbol{\textcolor{red}{\pi r^2}} because the cross section is circular. 

 

This can be expanded to more complex prisms.

Example: The diagram below shows a triangular prism. Work out the volume of the shape. 

volume of prism

Firstly, find the cross section. As this is a triangular prism, this just entails finding the area of a triangle. 

\text{Area of Cross Section}=\textcolor{red}{\frac{1}{2} \times 5 \times 6 =15} \text{ cm}^2

Thus, 

\text{Volume of the prism }=\textcolor{red}{15}\times \textcolor{blue}{3.5}=52.5\text{ cm}^3 (3 sf)

Level 4-5GCSEEdexcel iGCSE

Volume of a Sphere

The formula for the volume of a sphere, which can be found on the formula sheet, is as follows: 

\text{Volume of a Sphere}=\frac{4}{3}\pi r^3

 

Example: The diagram below shows a sphere with a radius of 5 \text{ cm}

volume of sphere

Work out the volume of the sphere. 

Give your answer to 4 significant figures. 

 

We are given that the radius is 5 \text{cm}, we simply need to substitute this into the formula. 

\text{Volume of a sphere} = \frac{4}{3} \pi (5)^3 \approx 523.6 \text{ cm}^3 (3 sf)

Level 6-7GCSEEdexcel iGCSE

Volume of Cones and Pyramids

The formula for the volume of a cone, which can be found on the formula sheet, is as follows: 

\text{Volume of cone }=\frac{1}{3} \times \textcolor{red}{\pi r^2} \times \textcolor{blue}{\text{ perpendicular height}}

 

The formula for the volume of a pyramid, which is not on the formula sheet, is as follows: 

\text{Volume of pyramid }=\frac{1}{3}\times\textcolor{red}{\text{ area of base }}\times\textcolor{blue}{\text{ perpendicular height}}

 

Example: The diagram below shows a square-based pyramid.

volume of pyramid and cone

Determine the volume of the pyramid. 

In this instance, the base is square. So the area of the base is simply: 

\textcolor{red}{14} \times \textcolor{red}{14} = \textcolor{red}{196} \text{ mm}^2

So, 

\text{Volume of pyramid }=\frac{1}{3}\times\textcolor{red}{196}\times\textcolor{blue}{25} \approx 1633.33 \text{ mm}^3

Level 6-7GCSEEdexcel iGCSE

Volume of 3D Shapes Example Questions

Firstly, we need to calculate the cross sectional area. 

The cross section is a trapezium, so \frac{a+b}{2}h must be used. 

\frac{45+60}{2} \times 20 =1050 \text{ cm}^2

Next, we must multiply by the length of the prism. 

1050 \times 80 = 84000 \text{ cm}^3

The volume for a square-based pyramid is calculated using the following formula:

\text{Volume }=\frac{1}{3} \times \text{base} \times \text{height}

The base area is simply a square, so:

5\times5=25 \text{ cm}^2

The volume is: 

\text{Volume }=\frac{1}{3} \times 25 \times 12=100\text{ m}^3

The formula for the volume of a pyramid is:

\text{Volume }=\frac{1}{3} \times \text{base} \times \text{height}

This results in:

\frac{1}{3}\times 18 \times (x+5)=6(x+5)

Setting this equal to the known volume results in a linear equation:

6(x+5)=54

Which can be solved as follows:

6(x+5)\div6=54\div6

x+5=9

x=9-5=4\text{ cm}

 

To begin with, simply imagine this as two separate shapes. First we will find the volume of the cylinder using: 

\text{Volume of a Cylinder} = \pi r^2 \times \text{ height}

This results in:

\pi \times 2.3^2 \times 5.6= 29.624 \pi \text{ cm}^3

This has been left in terms of \pi for the sake of accuracy. 

Next calculate the volume of the hemisphere, which is simply half a sphere: 

\text{Volume of a Hemisphere}= \frac{1}{2} \times \frac{4}{3} \pi r^3

Resulting in:

\frac{1}{2} \times \frac{4}{3} \pi \times 2.3^3=8.111\pi \text{ cm}^3

Finally, add the two volumes together:

8.111\pi + 29.624 \pi =119 \text{ cm}^3 (sf)

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