Lec 4 Structure Properties of Materials
Lec 4 Structure Properties of Materials
Lec 4 Structure Properties of Materials
Mechanical Properties
According to their
location
A normal stress arises when the applied force acts perpendicular to the area of
interest.
A shear stress arises when the applied force acts in a direction parallel to the
area of interest.
Deformation:
General term which is used to indicate the change in form
or dimensions of a body. It may be due to external load,
heat, moisture,…
Rigidity , Stiffness:
Resistance to deformation under applied load.
Malleability:
Ability to deformation under compressive load.
Hardness:
Resistance to scratching, penetration, wear.
The Tensile Test: Use of the Stress–Strain
Diagram
Normally, the cross section is circular, but rectangular specimens are also used.
During testing, deformation is confined to the narrow center region, which has
a uniform cross section along its length.
1- The specimen is placed in the testing machine and a force F, called the
load, is applied.
Elastic behavior
Elastic deformation is nonpermanent, which means that when the applied load
is released, the piece returns to its original shape.
STRESS–STRAIN BEHAVIOR
Elastic behavior
stress and strain are proportional to each other through the relationship
There are some materials (e.g., concrete, and many polymers) for which this
initial elastic portion of the stress–strain curve is not linear
Poisson’s ratio is defined as the ratio of the lateral strain to axial strain in an
axial loaded specimen,
the point of yielding may be determined as the initial departure from linearity of
the stress–strain curve; this is sometimes called the proportional limit.
• No permanent deformation
until the elastic limit, el
In such cases the position of this point may not be determined precisely.
The tensile strength TS (MPa) is the stress at the maximum point on the
engineering stress–strain curve. This corresponds to the maximum stress that can
be sustained by a structure in tension;
TENSILE STRENGTH