The document discusses calculating the surface area and volume of cuboids and prisms. It provides formulas for surface area of cuboids as the sum of the areas of the six faces. The volume of a cuboid or prism is calculated by multiplying the area of the base by the height. Examples are given of using these formulas to find surface areas and volumes of various shapes.
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Introduction to cuboids and their properties, focusing on finding surface areas through calculations.
Calculating the total surface area of a cuboid with dimensions. Example calculations yielding 262 cm2.
Presenting the formula for surface area of a cuboid (2lw + 2lh + 2hw) and surface area of a cube (6x²).
Solving problems related to the surface area including a chequered cuboid with details about areas.
Using nets to visualize and calculate the surface area of a 3D shape effectively.
Creating cuboids from cubes, learning to calculate the number of cubes in structures.
Defining volume as the space occupied by a 3D object and its measurement in cubic units.
Finding volume using the formula (length × width × height), example providing 520 cm³.
Explaining volume through water displacement, defining the equivalence of cm³ to ml.
Calculating volumes of complex shapes by dividing into cuboids and applying formulas for prisms.
Surface area ofa cuboid
To find the surface area of a shape, we calculate the
total area of all of the faces.
A cuboid has 6 faces.
The top and the bottom of the
cuboid have the same area.
3.
Surface area ofa cuboid
To find the surface area of a shape, we calculate the
total area of all of the faces.
A cuboid has 6 faces.
The front and the back of the
cuboid have the same area.
4.
Surface area ofa cuboid
To find the surface area of a shape, we calculate the
total area of all of the faces.
A cuboid has 6 faces.
The left hand side and the right
hand side of the cuboid have
the same area.
5.
Surface area ofa cuboid
To find the surface area of a shape, we calculate the
total area of all of the faces.
Can you work out the
5 cm
8 cm surface area of this cuboid?
The area of the top = 8 × 5
= 40 cm2
7 cm The area of the front = 7 × 5
= 35 cm2
The area of the side = 7 × 8
= 56 cm2
6.
Surface area ofa cuboid
To find the surface area of a shape, we calculate the
total area of all of the faces.
5 cm So the total surface area =
8 cm
2 × 40 cm2 Top and bottom
7 cm + 2 × 35 cm2 Front and back
+ 2 × 56 cm2 Left and right side
= 80 + 70 + 112 = 262 cm2
7.
Formula for thesurface area of a cuboid
We can find the formula for the surface area of a cuboid
as follows.
Surface area of a cuboid =
w
l
2 × lw Top and bottom
h + 2 × hw Front and back
+ 2 × lh Left and right side
= 2lw + 2hw + 2lh
8.
Surface area ofa cube
How can we find the surface area of a cube of length x?
All six faces of a cube have the
same area.
The area of each face is x × x = x2
Therefore,
x
Surface area of a cube = 6x2
9.
Chequered cuboid problem
Thiscuboid is made from alternate purple and green
centimetre cubes.
What is its surface area?
Surface area
=2×3×4+2×3×5+2×4×5
= 24 + 30 + 40
= 94 cm2
How much of the
surface area is green?
48 cm2
10.
Surface area ofa prism
What is the surface area of this L-shaped prism?
3 cm
To find the surface area of
3 cm
this shape we need to add
together the area of the two
4 cm L-shapes and the area of the
6 rectangles that make up
6 cm the surface of the shape.
Total surface area
= 2 × 22 + 18 + 9 + 12 + 6
+ 6 + 15
5 cm = 110 cm2
11.
Using nets tofind surface area
It can be helpful to use the net of a 3-D shape to calculate its
surface area.
Here is the net of a 3 cm by 5 cm by 6 cm cuboid
6 cm
Write down the
area of each
3 cm 18 cm2 3 cm
6 cm face.
Then add the
5 cm 15 cm2 30 cm2 15 cm2 30 cm2
areas together
to find the
surface area.
3 cm 18 cm2 3 cm
Surface Area = 126 cm2
Making cuboids
We canwork this out by dividing the cuboid into layers.
The number of cubes in each layer
can be found by multiplying the
number of cubes along the length
by the number of cubes along the
width.
3 × 4 = 12 cubes in each layer
There are three layers altogether
so the total number of cubes in the
cuboid = 3 × 12 = 36 cubes
14.
Making cuboids
The amountof space that a three-dimensional object takes
up is called its volume.
Volume is measured in cubic units.
For example, we can use mm3, cm3, m3 or km3.
The 3 tells us that there are three dimensions, length, width
and height.
Liquid volume or capacity is measured in ml, l, pints or
gallons.
15.
Volume of acuboid
We can find the volume of a cuboid by multiplying the area of
the base by the height.
The area of the base
= length × width
So,
height, h
Volume of a cuboid
= length × width × height
= lwh
length, l
width, w
16.
Volume of acuboid
What is the volume of this cuboid?
Volume of cuboid
= length × width × height
5 cm
= 5 × 8 × 13
8 cm 13 cm = 520 cm3
Volume and displacement
By dropping cubes and cuboids into a measuring cylinder
half filled with water we can see the connection between the
volume of the shape and the volume of the water displaced.
1 ml of water has a volume of 1 cm 3
For example, if an object is dropped into a measuring
cylinder and displaces 5 ml of water then the volume of the
object is 5 cm3.
What is the volume of 1 litre of water?
1 litre of water has a volume of 1000 cm 3.
19.
Volume of aprism made from cuboids
What is the volume of this L-shaped prism?
3 cm
3 cm We can think of the shape as
two cuboids joined together.
4 cm Volume of the green cuboid
= 6 × 3 × 3 = 54 cm3
6 cm
Volume of the blue cuboid
= 3 × 2 × 2 = 12 cm3
Total volume
5 cm = 54 + 12 = 66 cm3
20.
Volume of aprism
Remember, a prism is a 3-D shape with the same
cross-section throughout its length.
3 cm We can think of this prism as lots
of L-shaped surfaces running
along the length of the shape.
Volume of a prism
= area of cross-section × length
If the cross-section has an area
of 22 cm2 and the length is 3 cm,
Volume of L-shaped prism = 22 × 3 = 66 cm3
21.
Volume of aprism
What is the volume of this prism?
12 m
4m
7m
3m
5m
Area of cross-section = 7 × 12 – 4 × 3 = 84 – 12 = 72 m2
Volume of prism = 5 × 72 = 360 m3
Editor's Notes
#2 The aim of this unit is to teach pupils to: Identify and use the geometric properties of triangles, quadrilaterals and other polygons to solve problems; explain and justify inferences and deductions using mathematical reasoning Understand congruence and similarity Identify and use the properties of circles Material in this unit is linked to the Key Stage 3 Framework supplement of examples pp 184-197.
#3 Discuss the meaning of surface area. The important thing to remember is that although surface area is found for three-dimensional shapes, surface area only has two dimensions. It is therefore measured in square units.
#7 Stress the importance to work systematically when finding the surface area to ensure that no faces have been left out. We can also work out the surface area of a cuboid by drawing its net ( see slide 51 ). This may be easier for some pupils because they would be able to see every face rather than visualizing it.
#9 As pupils to use this formula to find the surface area of a cube of side length 5 cm. 6 × 5 2 = 6 × 25 = 150 cm 2 . Repeat for other numbers. As a more challenging question tell pupils that a cube has a surface area of 96 cm 2 . Ask them how we could work out its side length using inverse operations.
#10 Discuss how to work out the surface area that is green. Ask pupils how we could write the proportion of the surface area that is green as a fraction, as a decimal and as a percentage.
#11 Discuss ways to find the surface area of this solid. We could use a net of this prism to help find the area of each face.
#12 Links: S3 3-D shapes – nets S6 Construction and Loci – constructing nets
#15 Link: S7 Measures – units of volume and capacity
#18 Ask pupils how we could use water in a measuring cylinder to find the volume of an object. Tell pupils that 1 cm 3 of water will displace 1 ml of water in the beaker. Demonstrate this by dropping each cuboid into the beaker, and recording how the level of the water changes. Use this slide to demonstrate how volume is linked to capacity. Links: S7 Measures – units of volume and capacity S7 Measures – reading scales
#19 Ask pupils to give the dimensions of a cube that would hold 1 litre of water. This would be a 10 cm by 10 cm by 10 cm cube. Ask pupils how many litres of water we could fit into a metre cube. (1000 litres). A litre of water has a weight of 1 kg. A metre cube would therefore hold 1 tonne of water! Link: S7 Measures – units of volume and capacity
#20 Compare this with slide 50, which finds the surface area of the same shape.