Mec - Mes 121 - 2-1
Mec - Mes 121 - 2-1
Mec - Mes 121 - 2-1
(MEC-MES 121)
3. Stress and Strain
Loading of Materials
Tensile loading
This is when the material is subjected to
external forces which stretch it.
Compressive loading
A material subject to forces which squeeze it.
Loading of Materials
There are a number of different ways in
which load can be applied to a member.
Typical loading types are:
a) Static or dead loads, i.e. non-fluctuating loads,
generally caused by gravity effects.
b) Live loads, as produced by, for example, lorries
crossing a bridge.
c) Impact or shock loads caused by sudden blows.
d) Fatigue, fluctuating or alternating loads, the
magnitude and sign of the load changing with
time.
Shear loading
A material is subject to forces which cause it
to twist or one face slide relative to an
opposite face.
Direct/Normal Stress
For uniform load intensity in a member,
direct stress is defined as the ratio of load to
cross-sectional area normal to the load.
The direct stress may be tensile (a pull)
or compressive (a push).
Stress has the units of pascal (Pa)
1 Pa = 1 N/
Because the area over which the forces are
applied is more generally rather than , it is
useful to recognise that:
◦ 1 GPa =1 GN/ = 1 kN/
◦ 1 MPa = 1 MN/ = 1 N/
Tensile stress =
2. A pipe has an outside diameter of 50 mm
and an inside diameter of 45 mm and is
acted on by a tensile force of 50 kN. What
is the stress acting on the pipe?
Solution
The cross-sectional area of the pipe
where D=external diameter
d=internal diameter
Direct Strain
When a material is subject to tensile or
compressive forces, it changes in length.
Strainis defined as the change in length
(extension or compression) per unit of
original length
Solution
2. A tensile test piece has a gauge length of
50 mm. This increases by 0.030 mm when
subject to tensile forces. What is the strain?
Solution
Tensile Testing of Materials
During tensile test, the material is stretched.
The most common type of specimen for
tensile test is ‘Dog bone’ specimen.
Elastic
Stage
Original (OA)
shape is restored when load is removed
(i.e. Strain returns to zero).
The material obeys Hooke’s law, which states that:
• The applied stress is directly proportional to the
strain.
There
will thus be some permanent deformation or
permanent set when load is removed
Yield Stress
At C the material stretches without further increase
in load. C is termed the yield point and the
corresponding stress is the yield stress.
After the points C, termed the upper yield point,
and D, the lower yield point, relatively rapid
increases in strain occur without correspondingly
high increases in load or stress.
The graph thus becomes much more shallow and
covers a much greater portion of the strain axis than
does the elastic range of the material.
The capacity of a material to allow these large
plastic deformations is a measure of the so-called
ductility of the material
i.e. the yield point is reached at a certain load
and the material continues to yield at a
slightly lower load.
For certain materials, for example, high
carbon steels and non-ferrous metals, it is
not possible to detect any difference
between the upper and lower yield points
and in some cases no yield point exists at
all.
In such cases a proof stress is used to
indicate the onset of plastic strain.
Plastic
stage
Beyond the yield point some increase in load is
required to take the strain to point E on the graph.
Between D and E the material is said to be in the
elastic-plastic state, some of the section remaining
elastic and hence contributing to recovery of the
original dimensions if load is removed, the
remainder being plastic.
The material is said to work harden or increase in
strength.
The process of cold working, i.e. cold drawing or
rolling, represents a work hardening or
strengthening.
Waisting /Necking
E represents the maximum load which the
test-piece can carry.
At this point the extension is no longer
uniform along the length of the specimen
but is localized at one portion.
The test-piece begins to neck down or
waist, the area at the waist decreasing
rapidly.
Local extension continues with a decrease
of load until fracture occurs at point F.
maximum / Ultimate Tensile Stress
The ultimate tensile stress (UTS) is defined
as:
Breaking
Stress
The nominal fracture or breaking stress is:
True Fracture
Stress
The true or actual fracture stress is:
Solution
Modulus of Elasticity =
4. A tie bar has two holes a distance of 4.0 m
apart. By how much does this distance
increase when a tensile load of 20 kN is
applied to the tie bar? The tie bar is a
rectangular section 40 mm X 10 mm and
the material of which the bar is made has a
tensile modulus of 210 GPa. Assume that
the limit of proportionality is not
exceeded.
Solution
Strain =
Modulus of Elasticity, E=
5. A machine is mounted on a rubber pad.
The pad has to carry a load of 6 kN and
has a maximum compression of 2 mm
under this load. The maximum stress that
is allowed for the rubber is 0.25 MPa.
What is the size of the pad that would be
appropriate for these maximum
conditions? The modulus of elasticity for
the rubber can be taken as being constant
at 5 MPa.
Solution
Compressive stress =
Modulus of Elasticity, E=
Strain =
Shear Stress
Consider a block or portion of material subjected to
a set of equal and opposite forces F
F
F
There is then a tendency for one layer of the
material to slide over another to produce the form of
failure shown below
Shear stress is defined as follows:
Double-shear
Poisson’s ratio =
Transverse strain = . 3 10.0001
= 0.000 031
Transverse strain =
Change in width = Transverse strain Original
width = 0.000 03 1 X 10
= 0.000 3 1 mm