Lecture On Strength of Materials 2014
Lecture On Strength of Materials 2014
Lecture On Strength of Materials 2014
BY:
DIVINA R. GONZALES
•MECHANICS OF DEFORMABLE BODIES- Study
of the relationship between externally applied
loads and their internal effects on deformable
bodies.
Where:
P
S S – Uniform internal stress
P – Axial force
Perpendicular
BAR A BAR B
A=50mm2 A=20mm2
1000N 500N
PROBLEMS ON SIMPLE STRESS
1.Determine the weight of the heaviest traffic
lighting system that can be carried by the two
wires shown if the allowable stress on wire AB is
90MPa and on wire AC is 110MPa given that the
cross sectional areas of wire AB is 50mm2 and
that of AC is 80 mm2.
B C
70 A 35
2. Determine the required cross sectional
areas of members BE, CD and CE of the given
truss shown, if the allowable stress in tension
is 120MPa while in compression is 105MPa. A
reduced allowable stress in compression is
given to reduce the danger of buckling.
D
C G
4m
3m 3m
A B E F H
3m 3m 3m 3m
Aluminum Bronze
2
A= 500mm A= 200mm2 Steel
A= 150mm2
2P
3P P
L br = 2m L st = 1.2m
L alum= 3.5m
C 8m B
B 55
200mm 600mm
R
A
5m
C
9m
B 3m
Shearing
area parallel
to the load
TYPES OF SHEARING STRESS
1. SINGLE SHEAR
LAP JOINT Rivet under Single
P t shear
P
130mm
Width P
P
of plate
P/2 tSPLI
CE t MAIN P
tSPLI PLATE
P/2
CE
P
3. PUNCHING SHEAR
P
4. INDUCED SHEAR
SHEARED
AREA P P
SHEARED
AREA
BEARING STRESS –
Contact pressure exerted by one body upon another body. Also
know as end stress. The force acts perpendicular to the area.
LAP JOINT
P t
P
130mm
Width of P P
plate
ENLARGEMENT OF
THE RIVET HOLES
DIAMETER
t OF THE PLATE
PROBLEMS ON SHEARING STRESS AND BEARING
STRESS
t=25mm
130mm
Determine the maximum force P that the top
chord can carry if the allow shearing stress is
50MPa, bearing stress is 60MPa and tensile
stress is 85MPa of the connection shown
a 200mm
b 120mm
P c 40mm
d 75mm
30
b
c
a
A 25.6 mm diameter bolt having a diameter at the root of the
threads of 21.7mm is used to faster two timbers as shown. The
nut is tightened to cause a tensile force of 34KN in the bolt.
Determine the shearing stress developed in the head of the bolt
and the threads. Also determine the outside diameter of the
washer if the inside diameter is 30mm and the bearing stress is
limited to 0.9MPa.
15mm
17mm
The bracket is supported by ½ inch
diameter pins at A and B (the pin at B fits in
the 45 slot in the bracket). Neglecting
friction, determine the shear stresses in the
pins, assuming single shear.
45
A
200lb
12in
B
36in
Compute the maximum force P that can be
applied to the foot pedal. The ¼ inch
diameter pin at B is in single shear, and its
working shear stress is 40000psi. The
cable attached at C has a diameter of 1/8
inch and a working normal stress of
20,000psi.
A
B C
2”
10
T
6”
2”
The figure shows a roof truss and the
detail of the connection at joint B.
Members BC and BE are angle sections
with thickness shown in the figure. The
working stresses are 70MPa for shear in
rivet and 140MPa for bearing stress due
to the rivets. How many 19-mm
diameter rivets are required to fasten the
said members to the gusset plate?
D
B F
6m
E
C G
A H
4m 4m 4m 4m
10mm
GUSSET PLATE
75X75X13
75X75X6
P BE
P BC
THIN WALLED CYLINDERS –
LONGITUDINAL
JOINT
CIRCUMFERENTIAL
JOINT
SCIRCUMFERE NTIAL
D D
S LONGITUDIN AL
2t 4t
1.A cylindrical tank 8m in diameter is 12m
high. If the tank is completely filled with
water, determine the required thickness of
tank plating if the allowable stress is
40MPa.
The tank shown in the figure
is fabricated from
400mm
600mm
Actual Rupture
Strength
STRESS
Ultimate Strength
Rupture Strength
Yield Point
Elastic limit
Proportional limit
STRAIN
The strength of the material is not only the criterion that
must be considered in designing a structure. The
stiffness of a material is frequently of equal importance.
Hooke’s Law states that up to the proportional limit, the
stress is proportional to strain. The constant of
proportionality based from experiment is the modulus of
elasticity.
STRESS STRAIN
P
S S
A L
PL
AXIAL
AE
•During a stress-strain test, the unit
deformation at a stress of 35MPa was
observed to be 167x10-6 m/m and at a
stress of 140MPa it was 667x10-6. If the
proportional limit was 200MPa, what is
the modulus of elasticity? Would these
results be valid if the proportional limit
were 150MPa? Explain.
•The compound bar
containing steel bronze Aluminum
Bronze Aluminum
Steel 4 ft 3 ft
2 ft
P 2P
3P 4P
•A round bar of length L tapers uniformly
from a diameter D at one end to a smaller
diameter d at the other end. Determine the
elongation caused by an axial tensile load P
if E is its modulus of elasticity.
4P L
E D d
•The rigid bars shown are separated by a roller
at C and pinned at A and D. A steel rod at B
helps support the load of 50KN. Compute the
vertical displacement of the roller at C. Answer:
2.82mm
STEEL
E=200x10 6 N/m2
L=3m P= 30KN
A= 300 mm2 D
A B
C
The rigid bars AB and CD
are supported by pins at
Aluminum
A and D. The vertical L=3ft
A=0.75in2
rods are made of E=10x106psi
COPPER ALUMINUM
Area (in2) 2 3
E (psi) 17x106 10x106 Bearing plate
S (ksi) 20 10
0.005”
10 in
alum
copper
•A reinforced concrete column 250mm in diameter is
designed to carry an axial compressive load of 400KN.
Using the allowable stress in concrete of Sconc =6MPa and S
steel = 120MPa, determine the required area of reinforcing
steel. Assume Econc=14GPa and Esteel = 200GPa. Answer:
1320mm2
A rigid block of mass M is supported by three
symmetrically spaced rods as shown. Each copper rod
has an area of 900mm2 Ecopper =120GPa and the allowable
stress is 70MPa. The steel rod has an area of 1200mm2,
Esteel=200GPa and allowable stress of 140MPa.
Determine the largest mass M which can be supported.
Answer: 22.3x103Kg
400KN
0.1mm
250mm steel
steel aluminum
•The composite bar is firmly attached to unyielding supports.
Compute the stress in each material caused by the
application of the axial load P=50kips. b) If the maximum
allowable stress in each material is Salum=22psi and
Ssteel=40psi, find the maximum P that the structure can
support.
Aluminum Steel
A=3.25 in2 A=5.5 in2
E=10x106psi E= 29x106psi
P
12in 25in
•The rigid beam is supported by the two bars shown in a
horizontal position before the load P is applied. If P=200KN,
determine the stress in each rod after its application. B) Find
the vertical movement of P. c) If the allowable stress in
aluminum is 80MPa and steel is 120MPa, find the maximum
load P that the system can carry
L=6 m steel
aluminum
L=4.5 m
3m 3m 3m
Steel •P
Aluminum
A in mm2 600 800
E in GPa 70 200
THERMAL STRESS
It is well known that changes in
temperature cause dimensional changes
in a body. An increase in temperature
results in expansion, whereas a
temperature decrease produces
contraction.
The thermal stress is:
TS E T
The thermal deformation is:
L T
Where = coefficient of thermal expansion and T=
change in temperature.
PROBLEMS ON THERMAL
STRESS AND THERMAL
DEFOMATION
•A steel rod with a cross-sectional area of
150mm2 is stretched between two fixed
points. The tensile load at 20C is 5000N.
What will be the stress at -20C? At what
temperature will the stress be zero? steel =
11.7x10-6/C and E=200GPa.
Answer=127MPa ; T= 34.2C
•Two identical steel bars 500mm long support
the rigid beam shown. An aluminum bar is
placed exactly in between them, that is
0.1mm shorter. a) If the rigid beam is
weightless determine the change in
temperature for the middle bar to just touch
the beam. b) If the beam weighs 300KN, find
the stress in each bar. c) If the beam weighs
250KN, determine the stress in each bar
when the temperature raises 35C d) If the
beam weighs 320KN, determine the stress in
each bar when the temperature drops 25C.
Aluminum Steel
A in mm2 2400 1200
in x 10-6 /C 23 11.7
E in GPa 70 200
0.1mm
500mm steel
steel aluminum
•The composite bar is firmly attached to unyielding supports.
The initial temperature is 80F when the load P = 20kips is
applied, compute the stress in when the temperature is
150F and when the temperature is 5F.
Steel
Aluminum
A=5.5 in2
A=3.25 in2
E= 29x106psi
E=10x106psi
= 12.8x10-6/F
= 12.8x10-6/F
P
12in 25in
•The rigid beam is supported by the two bars shown in a
horizontal position before the load P is applied. If
P=200KN, determine the stress in each rod after an
increase in temperature of 40C B) drop of 65C.
L=6 m steel
aluminum L=4.5 m
3m 3m 3m
•P
Steel
Aluminum
A in mm2 600 800
in x 10-6 /C 23 11.7
E in GPa 70 200
•BEAMS
It is a structure usually horizontal acted upon
by transverse loads (forces that acts
perpendicular to the plane containing the
longitudinal axis of the beam)
Simply Supported
P
W N/m
Cantilever Beams
P
Beams with Overhang W N/m
•TYPES OF LOADS
P F
Concentrated Loads
W N/m
Uniformly Distributed
V Fy left
M M left M right
and
dv
w = slope of the shear diagram
dx
dM
v = slope of the moment diagram
dx
These relations are amplified to provide a
semi graphical method of computing shear
and moment which supplements the
equations
V Fy left
and
M M left M right
V2 V1 Aload diagram
M 2 M 1 AShear daigram
A summary of the principles presented suggests the
following procedure for the construction of shear and
moment diagrams
1. Compute the reactions
Positively
decreasing load Negatively
increasing load
Negatively Positively
decreasing load increasing load
b
3m 5000N
2000N/m 200mm
1m 3m
3. A 2” diameter bronze bar is used as a
simply supported beam 8ft long.
Determine the largest uniformly distributed
load, which can be, applied over the right
half of the beam if the flexural stress is
limited to go 10ksi?
4. A simply supported rectangular “yacal”
beam, 75mm wide by 150mm deep,
carries a uniformly distributed load of 2250
N / m over its entire length. What is the
maximum length of the beam if the flexural
stress is limited to 18 Mpa?
5. A simply supported beam 6m long is
composed of two C 200x28 channels riveted back
to back. What uniformly distributed load can be
carried, in addition to the weight of the beam,
without exceeding a flexural stress of 125 MN/m2
if (a) the webs are vertical and (b) the webs are
horizontal. Refer to Appendix B for channel
properties.
6. A beam with a S380 x 74 section is
simply supported at the ends. It supports a
central concentrated load of 40 kN and a
uniformly distributed load of 15 kN/m over
its entire length, including the weight of the
beam. Determine the maximum length of
the beam if the flexural stress is not to
exceed 130 Mpa. Refer to Appendix B for
properties of S shapes.
7. A beam 15 m long is simply supported 2 m
from each end. It is a built–up made of four angle
bars 100x75x13, with long legs horizontal (see
Table B-6) welded to a flat bar 25mmx300mm as
shown in the figure. Determine the total
uniformly distributed load that can be carried
along its entire length without exceeding a
flexural stress of 120 MPa.
8. A beam with a W2360x33section
(see Table B-2) is used as a
cantilever beam 7.5 m long. Find the
maximum uniformly distributed load
which can be applied over the entire
length of the beam, in addition to the
weight of the beam, if the flexural
stress is not to exceed 140 MN / m2
9. A 12-m beam simply supported at
the ends carries a uniformly distributed
load of 20kN / m over its entire length.
What is the lightest W shape beam that
will not exceed a flexural stress of
120MPa ? What is the actual stress in
the beam selected?
10. A simply supported steel beam 10m
long carries a uniformly distributed load of
18kn/m load over the entire length and a
central concentrated load of 25Kn.
Determine the lightest Wide flanged section
that can be used to support the load. What
is the actual resulting stress in the beam
selected.
11. A cantilever wooden beam is
composed of two segments with
rectangular cross sections. The width of
each section is 75mm but their depths
(150mm and 250mm) are different, as
shown in the figure. Determine the
maximum bending stress in each beam.
50KN
1.5m 2m
UNSYMMETRICAL SECTION DESIGN
FOR BENDING STRESS
20mm
W N/m
yc
120mm
L NA
yt
20mm
“b”
2. Compute the maximum tensile and
compressive stresses developed in the
beam that is loaded and has the cross-
sectional properties shown.
8KN 30mm
10KN/m
4m 1m 125mm
25mm
100mm
3. Determine the maximum safe value of W that
can be carried by the beam shown if given the
following allowable stresses fb(tension)=60MPa and
fb(compression)=90MPa
80mm
20mm 20mm
W W
6W KN
35mm
2m 8m 2m
DESIGN FOR SHEARING STRESS
3V
Max. f v
2bh
1. Draw the shearing stress
distribution for a rectangular beam
75mmx200mm which is simply
supported on a 10m beam with a load
of 20KN/m over the entire length.
2. Determine the maximum and minimum
shearing stress in the web of the wide flange
section if V=120KN.
180mm
300mm
30mm 220mm
3. The distributed load shown is supported by a
box beam shown using four pieces of 50mm x
250mm plank of Molave timber. Determine the
maximum safe value of w that will not exceed a
flexural stress of 10 MPa or a shearing stress of
1MPa.
4. The distributed load shown is supported by a wide-
flange section W 360x45 of the given dimensions.
Determine the maximum safe w that will not exceed a
flexural stress of 140 MPa or a shearing stress of 75
MPa.
2m 4m
DESIGN FOR FLEXURE AND SHEAR