02 Strength of Materials Intro
02 Strength of Materials Intro
02 Strength of Materials Intro
4 UNITS
Strength of materials, also called mechanics of materials, deals with the
behavior of solid objects subject to stresses and strains.
The complete theory began with the consideration of the behavior of one and
two dimensional members of structures, whose states of stress can be
approximated as two dimensional, and was then generalized to three
dimensions to develop a more complete theory of the elastic and plastic
behavior of materials. An important founding pioneer in mechanics of materials
was Stephen Timoshenko.
* The study of strength of materials often refers to various methods of calculating the
stresses and strains in structural members, such as beams, columns, and shafts.
* The methods employed to predict the response of a structure under loading and its
susceptibility to various failure modes takes into account the properties of the
materials such as its yield strength, ultimate strength,Young's modulus, and Poisson's
ratio.
Strain is the relative internal change in shape of an infinitesimally small cube of material
and can be expressed as a non-dimensional change in length or angle of distortion of the
cube.
Types of Deformation:
Permanent deformation is irreversible; the deformation stays even after removal of the
applied forces, while the temporary deformation is recoverable as it disappears after the
removal of applied forces.
Ultimate Strength
Young’s Modulus
Poisson's ratio
* The yield strength or yield stress is
a material property and is the stress
corresponding to the yield point at
which the material begins to deform
plastically.
ULTIMATE STRENGTH
Young's modulus E, the Young modulus or the modulus of
elasticity in tension, is a mechanical property that measures the
tensile stiffness of a solid material. It quantifies the relationship
between tensile stress δ (force per unit area) and axial strain ε
(proportional deformation) in the linear elastic region of a
material and is determined using the formula:
Young's moduli are typically so large that they are expressed not
in pascals but in gigapascals (GPa).
The field of strength of materials deals with forces and deformations that result
from their acting on a material. A load applied to a mechanical member will
induce internal forces within the member called stresses when those forces are
expressed on a unit basis.
The stresses acting on the material cause deformation of the material in various
manners including breaking them completely. Deformation of the material is
called strain when those deformations too are placed on a unit basis.
In continuum mechanics, stress is a physical quantity that expresses the
internal forces that neighboring particles of a continuous material exert on each other,
while strain is the measure of the deformation of the material.
* For example, when a solid vertical bar is supporting an overhead weight, each particle
in the bar pushes on the particles immediately below it.
* When a liquid is in a closed container under pressure, each particle gets pushed against
by all the surrounding particles. The container walls and the pressure-inducing surface
(such as a piston) push against them in (Newtonian) reaction. These macroscopic forces
are actually the net result of a very large number of intermolecular
forces and collisions between the particles in those molecules.
Axial loading – The applied forces are collinear with the longitudinal axis of the
member. The forces cause the member to either stretch or shorten.
•Tensile stress is the stress state caused by an applied load that tends to elongate the material along the
axis of the applied load, in other words, the stress caused by pulling the material. The strength of structures
of equal cross-sectional area loaded in tension is independent of shape of the cross-section. Materials
loaded in tension are susceptible to stress concentrations such as material defects or abrupt changes in
geometry. However, materials exhibiting ductile behaviour (most metals for example) can tolerate some
defects while brittle materials (such as ceramics) can fail well below their ultimate material strength.
•Shear stress is the stress state caused by the combined energy of a pair of opposing forces acting along
parallel lines of action through the material, in other words, the stress caused by faces of the
material sliding relative to one another. An example is cutting paper with scissors[4] or stresses due to
torsional loading.
Yield Strength & Tensile Strength
➢ Strength of Materials extends the study of forces that was begun in
Engineering Mechanics.
➢ Mechanics – covers the relations between forces acting on rigid bodies; in
Statics. The bodies are in equilibrium, whereas in Dynamics, they are
accelerated but can be put in equilibrium…
➢ In contrast (to Mechanics), Strength of Materials deals with the relations
between externally applied loads and their internal effects on the bodies. The
bodies are no longer assumed to be ideally rigid; the deformations, however
small…
➢ Throughout the subject, we shall study the principles that govern these two (2)
fundamental concepts of Strength and Rigidity.