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CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS By Dr. Krisada Chaiyasarn Department of Civil Engineering, Faculty of Engineering Thammasat university

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Page 1: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity

CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS By Dr. Krisada Chaiyasarn Department of Civil Engineering, Faculty of Engineering Thammasat university

Page 2: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity

Outline •  Tension and compression test • Stress-strain diagram • Stress-strain behaviour of ductile and brittle materials • Hooke’s law • Strain energy • Poisson’s ratio • Shear stress-strain diagram

Page 3: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity

The Tension and Compression Test •  The strength of a material depends on its ability to sustain a

load without undue deformation or failure •  This property is inherent, and can be determined by

experiment, otherwise, we will need to study micro-mechanics

•  The tension and compression test is used to determine the relationship between the average normal stress and average normal strain in engineering materials, e.g. metals, ceramics, polymers and composites

Page 4: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity

The Tension and Compression Test • A specimen of the material is made into

a standard shape and size • Circular cross-section with enlarged

ends to ensure failure not occur at the grips

•  Two punch marks with a constant cross-sectional area A0 and gauge length L0

• Strain gauges are placed at the middle section of the specimen

Page 5: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity

The Tension and Compression Test •  A specimen is then placed in a machine and stretched at a very

slow constant rate until it fails •  The load P is recorded, •  The elongation δ = L – L0 between the punch marks will be

measured using extensometer •  δ is used to calculate the average normal strain •  Or the strain gauge is used directly to measure strain •  The electrical wire is experiencing the same strain and causes the

resistance in electrical wire to change, hence the resistance in the wire can be converted to strain

Page 6: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity

The Stress-Strain Diagram • Normally, specimen may not be made into specific size,

hence the stress-strain diagram is reported instead to study the material properties of a specimen

Page 7: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity

Conventional Stress-Strain Diagram • Nominal or engineering stress assumes the stress is

constant over the cross section and throughout the gauge length

• Hence, for the nominal stress, the applied load P is divided by the specimen’s original cross-sectional area A0

•  Likewise, nominal or engineering strain, the elongation δ is divided by the original gauge length L0

Page 8: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity

The Conventional Stress-Strain Diagram •  The conventional stress-strain diagram is to plot the

corresponding values of σ and ε •  The diagram of a particular material will be similar but not

identical due to •  Slight material’s composition •  Microscopic imperfections •  The way it is manufactured •  The rate of loading •  The temperature

Page 9: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity

The stress-strain diagram - steel • Elastic Behaviour

•  The curve is a straight line throughout the region

•  Stress is proportional to strain •  The material is said to be linear-

elastic •  The upper stress is called the

proportional limit σpl •  After this point, the curve will bend

and continue to elastic limit σY

•  If the load is removed, the specimen will return to its original shape

•  For steel σpl and σY is very similar, and hard to detect

Page 10: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity

The stress-strain diagram - steel • Yielding

•  The material will break down and cause it to deform permanently

•  The stress at this point is called yield stress or yield point σY

•  The deformation is called plastic deformation

•  For carbon steel, the upper yield point occurs first, then a decrease in load-carrying capacity to a lower yield point

•  At yield point, the specimen continues to elongate without increase in load, this is called perfectly plastic

Page 11: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity

The stress-strain diagram - steel • Strain hardening

•  An increase in load can be seen •  The load rises until it reaches a

maximum stress called ultimate stress σu

• Necking •  The specimen continues to

elongates but the cross-sectional area starts to decrease

•  The decrease is uniform over the gauge length

•  The neck will form and the specimen continues to elongate until it breaks at the fracture stress, σf

Page 12: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity

True Stress-Strain Diagram • Actual cross-sectional area is used and instant load is

measured •  This produces actual true stress-strain diagram• When the strain is small, the conventional and true stress-

strain diagram coincide •  The differences is during the strain-hardening range •  The large divergence is seen within the necking region,

the specimen support a decreasing load. • But the material actually sustains increasing stress until

failure

Page 13: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity

Engineering Design • Normally, most engineering design is done within the

elastic range. •  This range, the strain is very small, hence the error using

the true and conventional values is very small, about 0.1%

Page 14: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity

Stress-Strain Behaviour of Ductile and Brittle Materials •  Any material that can be subjected to large strains before it

fractures is called a ductile material. •  Example, mild steel •  The percentage elongation is the specimen’s fracture strain

expressed as a percent.

•  The percent reduction in area can also be used to specify ductility

•  About 38% for a mild steel for percentage elongation and 60%for percentage reduction in area

Page 15: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity

Ductile material • Yielding occurs at constant

stress • Most metals do not exhibit

constant yielding, and yield point is not easy to define.

• Normally, a yield strength is define using an offset method, where a 0.2% strain is offset, and a parallel is drawn to define a yield strength

•  1 ksi = 6.89 MPA • E.g. brass, molybdenum, zinc,

aluminium

Page 16: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity

Ductile material • Yield strength is not a physical

property, but it is a stress that causes permanent strain

• Here, we assume yield strength, yield point, elastic limit, proportional limit all coincide

• Except rubber, which nonlinear elastic behavior

• Wood is moderately ductile, varies from species to species

• Wood is directional material

Page 17: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity

Brittle Materials • Material exhibit little or no

yielding before failure • Example, gray cast iron, concrete • Can withstand much higher

compressive stress • Cracks and imperfections tend to

close up and bulge out •  For concrete, compressive stress

is 12.5 times greater than tensile strength

Page 18: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity

Hooke’s Law • Most engineering materials exhibit a linear relationship

between stress and strain within the elastic range. • Robert Hooke discover the law in 1676, and created

Hooke’s law

• E is called modulus of elasticity or Young’s Modulus, named after Thomas Young

• E is the slope of initial straight-line of the stress-strain diagram, up to the proportional limit

• E has the same unit as σ

Page 19: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity

Hooke’s Law •  For steel alloy, from soft

steel to hardest steel, E is about 200 Gpa

•  E can only be used in material with linear elastic behaviour

•  If the stress is greater than the proportional limit, the stress-strain diagram is not a straight, so E is no longer valid

Page 20: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity

Strain Hardening •  If a specimen of ductile material is loaded to the plastic range, then unloaded,

the elastic strain is recovered, but the plastic strain remains. •  Hence the material is subjected to a permanent set. •  When the material is loaded again, it still continue along the elastic line, but

the yield point will be higher. •  It then has greater elastic range, but less plastic region

Page 21: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity

Strain Energy • During deformation, a material store energy internally

throughout its volume •  This is called strain energy

Page 22: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity

Strain Energy •  The strain energy per unit volume or strain-energy

density

•  For a linear elastic material, Hooke’s law applies, hence

Page 23: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity

Modulus of Resilience •  When the stress σ reaches the proportional limit, the strain-energy

density is referred to as the modulus of resilence •  It’s the shaded triangular area under the diagram. •  It is the physical property of a material indicating the ability of the

material to absorb energy without any permanent damage to the material

Page 24: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity

Modulus of Toughness •  This quantity in the entire area under the stress-strain diagram. •  It indicates the strain energy density of the material just before it

fractures •  This is an important properties when designing a member that may be

overloaded. •  For steel, by changing the carbon in steel, the diagram will change,

hence the modulus of resilience and toughness will change

Page 25: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity

Example

Page 26: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity

Example

Page 27: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity

Example

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Poisson’s Ratio • When deforming a body, object elongate and contract in

more than one direction • Example when a rubber is subjected to a compressive

stress, the block contract, but the radius or lateral strain increase

• S.D. Poisson discover the ratio of elongation and lateral strain is constant within the elastic range.

• Hence Poisson’s ratio, for an isotropic and homogeneous material

Page 29: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity

Poisson’s Ratio •  The negative sign indicate longitudinal elongation and

lateral contraction and vice versa • Only axial force cause these strain • Poisson’s ratio has no unit •  For ‘ideal material’, no lateral deformation when stretched

or compressed, Poisson’s ratio will be 0 • Poisson’s ratio has the value 0 ≤ ν ≤ 0.5

Page 30: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity

Example

Page 31: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity

The Shear Stress-Strain Diagram • When a small element is subjected to pure shear, equal

shear stresses are developed directed toward or away on the corner’s element.

•  For a homogeneous and isotropic material, the shear stress will deform an element uniformly

• Pure shear is studied when a specimen is subjected to torsion, and a shear stress-strain diagram can be obtained.

Page 32: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity

The Shear Stress-Strain Diagram •  The material will exhibit linear-elastic

behaviour and it will have a proportional limit, τpl, and it will then reach an ultimate shear stress τu, and then lose its shear strength and reach fracture stress, τf

• Hooke’s Law applied for linear-elastic material

• G is the shear modulus of elasticity or the modulus of rigidity

• G has the same unit as τ

Page 33: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity

The Shear Stress-Strain Diagram • Material constant can be related as

Page 34: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity

Example

Page 35: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity

Example

Page 36: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity

Creep • When a material has to support a load for a very long

period of time, the permanent deformation is known as creep

• Creep is time dependent permanent deformation •  For metal and ceramics, creep occurs when members are

subjected to high temperature • Stress and/or temperature is a major cause of creep • A member is designed to resist creep strain for a specified

time period, called creep strength • A simple test is to test several specimens at a constant

temperature, with different axial stress, then measure the time needed to produce allowable strain, a curve of stress over time can then be plotted

Page 37: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity

Creep • Creep strength will decrease for higher temperature or

higher stress • Usually a factor of safety is applied to allow for creep, as

creep can be difficult to determine

Page 38: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity

Fatigue • When a metal is subjected to repeated cycles of stress, it

causes the structure to break. • Usually occurs in connecting rods, crankshafts, any part

with cyclic loading •  Fracture will occur at less than material’s yield stress • Usually causes due to imperfections, when localized

stress is much greater than average stress, can cause cracks, ductile material behaves like brittle

• Endurance or fatigue limit is the limiting stress when applying a load for a specified number of cycles

•  The S-N diagram or stress-cycle diagram is plotted to determine endurance, S is stress, N is number of cycles to failure

Page 39: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity

Fatigue •  For steel, the endurance is when the stress becomes

horizontal, from the graph it is 27 ksi or 186 Mpa •  For aluminum is not well-defined, we take the stress at the

a limit of 500 million cycles, any stress below this, the fatigue in infinite.

Page 40: CE 221: MECHANICS OF SOLIDS I CHAPTER 3: · PDF fileCHAPTER 3: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS ... load without undue deformation or failure ... • E is called modulus of elasticity
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