Homework 6-Solutions
Homework 6-Solutions
Homework 6-Solutions
Due: 10/12/2010
This problem asks that we ascertain which of four metal alloys will not (1) experience
plastic deformation, and (2) elongate more than 1.3 mm when a tensile load of 29,000 N
is applied. It is first necessary to compute the stress; a material to be used for this
application must necessarily have a yield strength greater than this value. Thus,
F 29,000( N )
2
230 MPa
A0 12.7 103 (m)
2
Of the metal alloys listed, aluminum, brass and steel have yield strengths greater than this
stress.
Next, we must compute the elongation produced in aluminum, brass, and steel in order to
determine whether or not this elongation is less than 1.3 mm. For aluminum
Therefore, of these four alloys, only brass and steel satisfy the stipulated criteria.
Fractional reduction = 1
10.6
1 0.708 0.292
12.6
5.) A copper bar of 10mm square section is subjected to a tensile load that
increases its length from 100.0 to 102 mm. The value of Poisson’s ratio for
copper is 0.353. Calculate the new dimensions of the bar.
The tensile strain of the sample = (102 – 100) / 100 = 0.02 The lateral strain if the
sample z = - x 0.353 = - 0.00706. Final width = (1 – 0.00706)lo =
(0.99294 x 10) mm = 9.9294 mm Final dimensions are 102mm x 9.93mm x 9.93mm.
6.) A specimen of magnesium alloy having a rectangular cross-section of
dimensions 3.2mm x 19.1mm is deformed in tension. Using the load
elongation data tabulated below answer the following questions;
a.) Plot the data as engineering stress versus engineering strain (recommend to
use software, e.g. Excel)
b.) Calculate the modulus of elasticity
c.) Determine the yield strength at a strain offset of 0.002
d.) Determine the tensile strength of this alloy
e.) Compute the modulus of resilience
f.) What is the ductility in % elongation?
This problem calls for us to make a stress-strain plot for a magnesium, given its tensile load-
length data, and then to determine some of its mechanical characteristics.
(a) The data are plotted below on two plots: the first corresponds to the entire stress-strain
curve, while for the second, the curve extends just beyond the elastic region of deformation.
(b) The elastic modulus is the slope in the linear elastic region as
50 MPa 0 MPa
E = = 50 x 10 3 MPa = 50 G
0.001 0
(c) For the yield strength, the 0.002 strain offset line is drawn dashed. It intersects the
stress-strain curve at approximately 150 MPa.
(d) The tensile strength is approximately 240 MPa corresponding to the maximum stress on
the complete stress-strain plot.
(f) The ductility, in percent elongation, is just the plastic strain at fracture, multiplied by one-
hundred. The total fracture strain at fracture is 0.110; subtracting out the elastic strain
(which is about 0.003) leaves a plastic strain of 0.107. Thus, the ductility is about 10.7%EL.