Material Report 01
Material Report 01
Material Report 01
OBJECTIVES:
To determine the tensile strength of metals.
To understand the general shape of the tensile stress and strain curve.
INTRODUCTION:
Tensile test are used in selecting materials for engineering applications. These tests provide
important information about properties of materials. Tensile properties often are measured during
development of new material and its process as well as predict the behavior of material under form
of uniaxial tension. Tensile testing is a way of determining how something will react when it is
pulled apart - when a force is applied to it in tension.
THEORY:
The load apply to the two ends of tensile specimen, the mechanical behavior may be predict by
stress and strain test. There are three types of load for it as tension, compression and shear.
This laboratory experiment based on the how the tension effect to the tensile specimen. The tensile
force can be apply until the specimen fracture. One of the most common stress and strain test is
perform from the tension test.
The ratio in between force and cross sectional area is defined as stress.
()
Stress () = ()
The ration in between elongations length and gauge length is defined as strain
()
Strain () = ()
For the true stress mean ration in between force and instantaneous area.
For the true strain mean ration in between elongate and instantaneous gauge length
For the engineering stress mean ration in between force and initial area
For the engineering strain mean ratio between elongate and initial gauge length
For the tensile test calculations engineering stress and engineering strain are used.
Figure 1
The gage length the reduced diameter section length can be calculate as the gage length. In here
calculate cross sectional area from this length. The necking also happened somewhere in this
reduced section. Usually gage length has marked in specimen.
Diameter to calculate the cross sectional area the smallest diameter can be measured.
Larger diameter used to hold the specimen in the tensile testing machine. The necking cannot be
happened in here because as it has larger diameter its mass also high.
According to the American Standard for Testing Material (ASTM) all the materials have a standard
length and diameter respectively but at times it can vary about 1mm or 2mm.
There are two types of deformation that are occurred during the test of materials
Elastic deformation
Plastic deformation
Elastic deformation:
In this deformation the length of the specimen can come to the original length. This occur
until the upper yield point according to the force elongation diagram. After the test the
elastic deformation is zero. Therefore this is 100% recoverable by strain.
Plastic deformation:
In this deformation occur after the specimen reaches to its upper yield point. Fracture of
the specimen occur during this region and ultimate tensile strength can be seen in here as
the necking point. After the test plastic deformation has some value.
Another important theory in tensile test is; as the maximum load the material can have is
at UTS point but it shows a plastic deformation. Actually the upper yield point can be used
to have a maximum load as it shows the elastic deformation , but the UTS point value
cannot applicable for choose a best material to build a structure. The reason for this is from
the UTS point the necking point dramatically increasing.
Figure 2
Figure 3
Figure 4
PROCEDURE:
Figure 5
CALCULATION
Original cross sectional area = r2 = * (2.25)2 = 15.9mm2
6750
Upper yield stress = = = 424.52 Nmm-2
15.9
6700
Lower yield stress = = 15.9 = 421.38 Nmm-2
9631
Ultimate tensile strength (UTS) = = 15.9 = 605.7 Nmm-2
()
Engineering Stress () = = =
() 15.9
()
Engineering Strain () = = =
() 16.2
Percentage elongation = = 30%
Young modulus = slope = =
RESULTS
Gage length = 16.2 mm
Diameter = 4.5mm
Force at upper yield point (by assuming according to the graph) =6750 N
Force at lower yield point (by assuming according to the graph) = 6700N
Ultimate tensile force = 9631N
Percentage elongation = = 30%
Only metallic materials can have two yields points on the graph. Other materials can have only
one yields point in the graph. The necking happened after reaches to the ultimate tensile strength
of the material. At this point the diameter reduce drastically only from one point. During the test
its difficult to predict this point. When diameter reduced necking is increasing.
The results from tensile test differ from each material. Some material takes fracture point only in
elastic deformation and some other material fracture during the plastic deformation.
The percentage area reduction and percentage elongation will be vary according to the limitation
on instrument because cannot measure it to the real decimal place and other reason is errors occur
during reading the measurements.
In industries these values helps to building a new structure with these different types of materials
which can apply the maximum load for it.
REFERENCES: