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Surface Area of Prisms

Surface Area of Prisms

The surface area of a 3D figure is the total area of all its outside faces. To find the surface area of a prism, you simply calculate the area of each flat face and add them all together.

Using a Net

A great way to visualize surface area is by using a net. A net is a 2D drawing of all the faces of a 3D shape laid out flat. If you fold up a net, it creates the 3D shape. Drawing a net helps ensure you don't forget to calculate the area of any face!

Rectangular Prisms

A rectangular prism has 66 rectangular faces. These faces come in three identical pairs: top and bottom, front and back, and left and right.

The formula for the surface area (SASA) of a rectangular prism with length ll, width ww, and height hh is:

SA=2lw+2lh+2whSA = 2lw + 2lh + 2wh

Example 1: Basic Rectangular Prism

Find the surface area of a rectangular prism with dimensions 4×3×24 \times 3 \times 2.

  1. Find the area of the top and bottom: 2×(4×3)=2×12=242 \times (4 \times 3) = 2 \times 12 = 24
  2. Find the area of the front and back: 2×(4×2)=2×8=162 \times (4 \times 2) = 2 \times 8 = 16
  3. Find the area of the left and right sides: 2×(3×2)=2×6=122 \times (3 \times 2) = 2 \times 6 = 12
  4. Add them together: 24+16+12=5224 + 16 + 12 = 52

The total surface area is 5252 square units.

Example 2: The Wrapping Paper Problem

How much wrapping paper is needed to completely cover a box that is 10×8×510 \times 8 \times 5 inches?

This is a real-world surface area problem!

SA=2(10×8)+2(10×5)+2(8×5)SA = 2(10 \times 8) + 2(10 \times 5) + 2(8 \times 5) SA=2(80)+2(50)+2(40)SA = 2(80) + 2(50) + 2(40) SA=160+100+80=340SA = 160 + 100 + 80 = 340

You would need 340340 square inches of wrapping paper.

Triangular Prisms

A triangular prism has 55 faces in total: 22 identical triangular bases and 33 rectangular sides.

To find the surface area:

  1. Find the area of the two triangular bases using the formula A=12bhA = \frac{1}{2}bh.
  2. Find the area of the three rectangular sides (length ×\times width).
  3. Add all five areas together.

Example 3: Triangular Prism

Find the surface area of a triangular prism where the triangular bases have a base of 66 cm, a height of 44 cm, and side lengths of 55 cm. The length of the prism is 1010 cm.

  1. Triangular bases: Area of one triangle = 12×6×4=12\frac{1}{2} \times 6 \times 4 = 12 cm2^2. Since there are two identical triangles, their combined area is 12+12=2412 + 12 = 24 cm2^2.

  2. Rectangular sides: The three rectangles connect to the three sides of the triangle (66 cm, 55 cm, and 55 cm) and are all 1010 cm long.

    • Bottom rectangle: 6×10=606 \times 10 = 60 cm2^2
    • Side rectangle 1: 5×10=505 \times 10 = 50 cm2^2
    • Side rectangle 2: 5×10=505 \times 10 = 50 cm2^2
  3. Total Surface Area: 24+60+50+50=18424 + 60 + 50 + 50 = 184

The total surface area is 184184 cm2^2.