Volume of a Prism

\( V=\text{area of cross-section}\times\text{length} \)
Geometry GCSE
Question 10 of 20

\( Triangular prism: base=7 cm, height=9 cm, length=14 cm. Volume? \)

Hint (H)
\( Area=1/2×base×height. \)

Explanation

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Statement

The volume of a prism is found by multiplying the area of its cross-section by its length:

\[ V = \text{area of cross-section} \times \text{length} \]

Why it’s true

  • A prism is a solid with a uniform cross-section throughout its length.
  • If you know the area of that cross-section, multiplying by the length gives the total space inside.

Recipe (how to use it)

  1. Identify the cross-section (triangle, rectangle, trapezium, etc.).
  2. Calculate its area.
  3. Multiply the area by the length of the prism.
  4. Give the answer in cubic units.

Spotting it

Prisms are solids where the shape of one end is identical all the way through: cuboids, cylinders, triangular prisms, trapezoidal prisms, etc.

Common pairings

  • Often appears with triangular prisms in GCSE exams.
  • Can involve compound shapes (cross-section split into rectangles/triangles).

Mini examples

  1. Rectangular prism: l=10, w=4, h=3 → area=12, length=10 → V=120.
  2. Triangular prism: base=6, height=4 → area=12, length=8 → V=96.

Pitfalls

  • Forgetting to calculate the cross-section area first.
  • Using slant length instead of perpendicular length.
  • Forgetting to cube the units.

Exam strategy

  • Sketch the cross-section separately.
  • Always label dimensions carefully.
  • Leave answers in exact form unless decimals are required.

Summary

The volume of a prism is the area of its cross-section multiplied by its length. Different prisms only differ by the shape of their cross-section.

Worked examples

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  1. A cuboid prism has cross-section area 12 cm² and length 10 cm. Find its volume.
    1. \( V=area×length \)
    2. \( V=12×10=120 \)
    Answer: 120 cm³
  2. A triangular prism has base 6 cm, height 4 cm, length 8 cm. Find volume.
    1. \( Area=1/2×6×4=12 \)
    2. \( V=12×8=96 \)
    Answer: 96 cm³
  3. \( A prism has trapezium cross-section: parallel sides 5 cm, 3 cm, height 4 cm. Length=10 cm. \)
    1. \( Area=1/2(5+3)×4=16 \)
    2. \( V=16×10=160 \)
    Answer: 160 cm³
  4. A triangular prism has cross-section area 20 cm², length 15 cm.
    1. \( V=20×15=300 \)
    Answer: 300 cm³
  5. A prism has hexagon cross-section area 50 cm², length 12 cm. Volume?
    1. \( V=50×12=600 \)
    Answer: 600 cm³
  6. \( A triangular prism has base=8 cm, height=5 cm, length=7 cm. \)
    1. \( Area=1/2×8×5=20 \)
    2. \( V=20×7=140 \)
    Answer: 140 cm³
  7. A prism has cross-section area 18 cm² and length 25 cm.
    1. \( V=18×25=450 \)
    Answer: 450 cm³
  8. \( A triangular prism has base=10 cm, height=6 cm, length=9 cm. \)
    1. \( Area=1/2×10×6=30 \)
    2. \( V=30×9=270 \)
    Answer: 270 cm³
  9. \( A trapezoidal prism has trapezium area=24 cm², length=20 cm. \)
    1. \( V=24×20=480 \)
    Answer: 480 cm³
  10. General prism with cross-section area A and length L.
    1. \( V=AL \)
    Answer: AL