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Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

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Page 1: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

Mechanics of Materials II

UET, TaxilaLecture No. (3)

Page 2: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

Typical stress-strain curves resulting from tensile tests on some

metals areshown in next Figures

Page 3: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

Tensile test curves for various metals

Page 4: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

Typical stress-strain curves for hard drawn wire, note the reduction in strain values

Page 5: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

Typical tension test results for various types of nylon and polycarbonate.

Page 6: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

Brass tension test

Page 7: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

Aluminium alloy tensile test

Page 8: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

Brittle polymer tensile test

Page 9: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

Eye Glass tensile test

Page 10: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

When σu & σy is not valid?

In some loading cases, e.g. buckling of struts, neither the yield stress nor the ultimate strength is a realistic criterion for failure of components.

Page 11: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

Load factor

In such cases it isconvenient to replace thesafety factor, based onstresses, with a differentfactor based on loads.

Page 12: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

Definition of load factor

The load factor

is therefore defined as:load at failure /allowable working load

Page 13: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

This is particularly useful in applications of the so-called plastic limit design procedures.

Page 14: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

Temperature stresses

When the temperatureof a component isincreased or decreasedthe material Respectivelyexpands or contracts.

Page 15: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

If this expansion orcontraction is notresisted in any waythen the processestake place free ofstress.

Page 16: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

If, however, the changesIn dimensions arerestricted then stressestermed as Temperature stresseswill be set up within the material.

Page 17: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

Consider a bar ofmaterial with a linearcoefficient of expansion ‘ ‘ . Let the originallength of the bar ‘L’and let the temperature increase be t.

Page 18: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

If the bar is free to expandthe change in length wouldbe given by

L = L tThen the new length L’ will be:

L’ = (L + L ) = L+ L t = L (1 + t)

Page 19: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

Compressive thermal stresses

If this extension were totally prevented, then a compressive stress would be set up equal to that produced when a bar of length: L ( 1 + t) is compressed through a distance of L t.

Page 20: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

In this case the bar experiences a compressive thermal strain equal to:

Page 21: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

In most cases ‘ t’ is very small compared with unity so that:

Page 22: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

But E = σ/Thus σ = E

= t

Page 23: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

This is the stress setup owing to totalrestraint on expansionsor contractions caused by a temperature rise, or fall, t.

Page 24: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

In the former case the stress is compressive,

in the latter case the stress is tensile.

Page 25: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

Partial Prevention

If the expansion or contraction of the bar is partially prevented then the stress set up will be less than that given by the equation above.

Page 26: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

Its value will be found in a similar way to that described above except that instead of being compressed through the total free expansion distance of L t it will be compressed through some proportion of this distance.

Page 27: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

The new mode will be depending on the amount of restraint.

Page 28: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

Assuming some fraction n of (L t) is allowed, then the extension which is prevented is:

(1 - n) L t.

Page 29: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

This will produce a compressive strain, as described previously, of magnitude:

Page 30: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

Or approximately

Page 31: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

The stress set up will then be:

E times

σ = (1-n) E t

Page 32: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

Thus, for example, if one-third of the free expansion is prevented the stress set up will be two-thirds of that given by the equation:

σ= t

Page 33: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

Stress concentrations & stress concentration factor

If a bar of uniform cross-section is subjected to an axial tensile or compressive load the stress is assumed to be uniform across the section.

Page 34: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

However,

in the presence of any sudden change of section, hole, sharp corner, notch, keyway, material flaw, etc., the local stress will rise significantly.

Page 35: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

The ratio of this stress to the nominal stress at the section in the absence of any of these so-called stress concentrations is termed as the stress concentration factor.

Page 36: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

stress concentration factor

SCF = Local stress/nominal stress

Page 37: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

ToughnessToughness is defined as: the ability of a material to withstand cracks,

In other words to prevent the transfer or propagation of cracks across its section hence causing failure.

Page 38: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

Types of toughness of materials

Two distinct types of toughness mechanism exist and in each case it is appropriate to consider the crack as a very high local stress concentration.

Page 39: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

First Toughness Type

The first type of mechanism relates particularly to ductile materials which are generally regarded as tough.

Page 40: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

This arises because the very high stresses at the end of the crack produce local yielding of the material and local plastic flow at the crack tip.

Page 41: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

This has the action of blunting the sharp tip of the crack and hence reduces its stress concentration effect

considerably (Fig. 1.15).

Page 42: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

High stress concentration factor at crack tip (notch tip)

Page 43: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

Area of local yielding of material reducing the stress-

concentration effect

Page 44: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

Second toughness mechanism

The second mechanism refers to fibrous, reinforced or resin-based materials which have weak interfaces.

Page 45: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

Examples for second mode of toughness

Typical examples are glass-fibre reinforced materials and wood.

Page 46: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

In the second mechanism of toughness

It can be shown that a region of local tensile stress always exists at the front of a propagating crack.

Page 47: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

Also

and provided that the adhesive strength of the fibre/resin interface is relatively low (one-fifth the cohesive strength of the complete material)

Page 48: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

Tensile stress mechanism

This tensile stress opens up the interface and produces a crack sink, i.e. it blunts the crack by effectively increasing the radius at the crack tip, thereby reducing the stress-concentration effect as appears in next fig.

Page 49: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

This principle is used stop, or at least delay, crack propagation in engineering components when a temporary "repair" is carried out by drilling a hole at the end of a crack, again reducing its stress-concentration effect.

Page 50: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

Toughness mechanism-type 2.

Page 51: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)
Page 52: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

Creep and FatigueIn the preceding paragraphs it has been suggested that failure of materials occurs when the ultimate strengths have been exceeded.

Page 53: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

Plastic Deformation

excessive deformation, as caused by plastic deformation beyond the yield point, can be considered as a criterion for effective failure of components.

Page 54: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

This chapter would not be complete, therefore, without reference to certain loading conditions under which materials can fail at stresses much less than the yield stress, namely creep and fatigue.

Page 55: Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)

Definition of creep

Creep is the gradual increase of plastic strain in a material with time at constant load.