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Axial Loading

The document discusses stress and strain under axial loading. It defines normal strain as the elongation per unit length and normal stress as the load divided by the original area. It describes how stress-strain diagrams show the elastic and plastic behavior of ductile and brittle materials. The yield strength is defined as the 0.2% offset yield strength. The document also discusses fatigue, Hooke's law, deformations under axial loading, bars with varying cross-sectional areas, and statically indeterminate problems.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
87 views81 pages

Axial Loading

The document discusses stress and strain under axial loading. It defines normal strain as the elongation per unit length and normal stress as the load divided by the original area. It describes how stress-strain diagrams show the elastic and plastic behavior of ductile and brittle materials. The yield strength is defined as the 0.2% offset yield strength. The document also discusses fatigue, Hooke's law, deformations under axial loading, bars with varying cross-sectional areas, and statically indeterminate problems.

Uploaded by

BolWol
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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MECHANICS OF MATERIALS (I)

STRESS AND STRAIN AXIAL LOADING

Dr. Jung-San Chen


Department of Engineering Science
National Cheng Kung University
NORMAL STRAIN

2-2
(elongation per unit length)

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NORMAL STRAIN

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2-3
2-4
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2-5
2P P
P
= = stress = =
A 2A A

= = normal strain = =
P
L L A
2
= =
2L L J.S. Chen
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=67fSwIjYJ-E (Steel)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hD_NJaZIpT0 (Al)

STRESS-STRAIN TEST

2-6
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STRESS-STRAIN DIAGRAM: DUCTILE MATERIALS

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STRESS-STRAIN DIAGRAM: BRITTLE MATERIALS

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STRESS-STRAIN DIAGRAM: DUCTILE MATERIALS

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STRESS-STRAIN DIAGRAM: DUCTILE MATERIALS
Yield Strength (Stress) = 0.2% Offset Yield Strength

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ELASTIC VS. PLASTIC BEHAVIOR

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Residual strain or
permanent strain
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ELASTIC VS. PLASTIC BEHAVIOR

If the strain disappears when the stress is removed,

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the material is said to behave elastically. (before
point B)
The largest stress for which this occurs is called the
elastic limit. (=proportional limit)

When the strain does not return to zero after the stress
is removed, the material is said to behave plastically.

J.S. Chen
FATIGUE
A member may fail due to fatigue at stress levels

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significantly below the ultimate strength if subjected to
many loading cycles.
Fatigue failure is of a brittle nature, even for materials
that are normally ductile.

When the stress is reduced below the endurance limit,


fatigue failures do not occur for any number of cycles.

[Note] : endurance limit is the stress for which failure


does not occur, even for an indefinitely large number
of loading cycles.
J.S. Chen
FATIGUE
Fatigue properties are shown on S-N diagrams.

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Stress at failure

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HOOKES LAW: MODULUS OF ELASTICITY
Below the yield stress

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= E ( Hooke ' s Law)
E = Young's Modulus or
Modulus of Elasticity
Strength is affected by alloying,
heat treating, and manufacturing
process but stiffness (Modulus
of Elasticity) is not.
Note: Strength refers to the
capacity of a structure to resist loads;
stiffness is ability to resist a
deformation

J.S. Chen
AXIALLY LOADED MEMBERS
Recall: Spring L: natural length (unstressed length,
relaxed length, or free length)
k
In linearly region:
L
k = or fP
P k=
P k: stiffness f: flexibility
L +
P 1
k = f= k =
P f

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DEFORMATIONS UNDER AXIAL LOADING
Prismatic Bar From Hookes Law: = E

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P
From the definition of stress: =
A

From the definition of strain: =
L
Equating and solving for the
deformation,
PL
= k= P = EA L
AE
=f =
P L EA
EA: axial rigidity of the bar J.S. Chen
DEFORMATIONS UNDER AXIAL LOADING
With variations in loading, cross-section or material

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PL
properties, =
i A E , Pi : internal force
i i

P1
i i
P1 = PA + PD + PC
P= PD + PC
(1)
L1 P A P 2
A A

P P3 = PC
L2 (2) 2

PD D PD PD P3 P1 L1 P2 L2 P3 L3
L3 =1 = ,2 = ,3
(3)
EA EA EA
= 1 + 2 + 3

This equation is only valid for prismatic bar or bar consisting of


prismatic segments ( Pi is the internal force)
J.S. Chen
DEFORMATIONS UNDER AXIAL LOADING
PL
=

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Strains are not Uniformly Distributed:
AE

P/ A
= =
E E

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BAR WITH VARYING CROSS-SECTIONAL AREA
N ( x)dx
d =
P(x) EA( x)
L N ( x ) dx

dx
=
0 EA( x )

It has been assumed that the stress distribution is uniform over cross
section

If is small error 0

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(obtained)
(obtained)

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=?

A
Similar figures:

D E =
AD =
: AB AE : AC DE : BC
B C
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STATIC INDETERMINATE

Statically Determinate Problems:

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The reaction and internal forces can be obtained
from the equilibrium equations.

Statically Indeterminate Problems:


The reaction and internal forces can not be
obtained from the equilibrium equations. It has to
consider the deformation geometry (boundary
condition).

J.S. Chen
Statically Indeterminate Problem

2 - 30
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EXAMPLE 2.03 Statically Indeterminate Problem

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Statically Indeterminate Problem

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SOLUTION:
Solve for the displacement at B due to

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the applied loads with the redundant
constraint released,

P1 = 0 P2 = P3 = 600 103 N P4 = 900 103 N

A1 = A2 = 400 10 6 m 2 A3 = A4 = 250 10 6 m 2
L1 = L2 = L3 = L4 = 0.150 m

Pi Li 1.125 109
L = =
i Ai Ei E

J.S. Chen
Solve for the displacement at B due to the
redundant constraint,

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P1 = P2 = RB

A1 = 400 10 6 m 2 A2 = 250 10 6 m 2
L1 = L2 = 0.300 m

R =
Pi Li
=
(
1.95 103 RB)
i Ai Ei E

J.S. Chen
Require that the displacements due to the loads and due
to the redundant reaction be compatible,

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= L +R = 0

=
(
1.125 109 1.95 103 RB)=0
E E
3
R A = 323 kN
RB = 577 10 N = 577 kN
RB = 577 kN
Find the reaction at A

Fy = 0 = R A 300 kN 600 kN + 577 kN


R A = 323 kN

J.S. Chen
THERMAL STRAIN

2 - 42
T
T =
L

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THE STRESS CHANGE DUE TO THE TEMPERATURE
RAISES

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Break

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POISSONS RATIO
For a slender bar subjected to axial loading:
x

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x 0, y = z =0 x =
E
Assuming that the material is isotropic
(no directional dependence),
y = z 0
Poissons ratio is defined as

lateral strain y z
=
=
=
axial strain x x
if the material is linear elastic
J.S. Chen
VOLUME CHANGE
y
a
c

b
x strain= length change
original length
z
x direction: x direction: a
Strain : y direction: b
y, z direction: Length change :
z direction: c
Final length=original length +length change
x direction: a (1 + )
Final length: y direction: b(1 )
z direction: c(1 )
J.S. Chen
VOLUME CHANGE
Original volume: V0 = abc
Final volume: V1 =a(1 + )b(1 )c(1 )
= abc(1 + 2 2 2 + 2 2 + 2 3 )
abc(1 + 2 ) if 1
Unit volume change : (dilatation)
V V1 V0 abc(1 + 2 ) abc
=e = =
V0 V0 abc

= (1 2 ) = (1 2 ) > 0 Volume must increase in tension
E condition
1 2 > 0 < 1/ 2
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GENERALIZED HOOKES LAW FOR MULTI-AXIAL
LOADING

2 - 63
For an element subjected to multi-axial loading, the normal
strain components resulting from the stress components may be
determined from the principle of superposition.
x 0, y 0, z 0
x y z
x = +
E E E
x y z
y = +
E E E
x y z
z = +
E E E
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SHEARING STRAIN (3D)
normal stresses

2 - 67
length change
shear stresses

change in shape
Sign conventions for shear stresses and strains
shear stress plane direction force
direction
+ + +
+
+
+
Shear strain The positive shear stresses are accompanied by
positive shear strains
J.S. Chen
SHEARING STRAIN (2D)

2 - 68
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SHEARING STRAIN VS. SHEARING STRESS

A plot of shear stress vs. shear strain is similar the

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previous plots of normal stress vs. normal strain
except that the strength values are approximately half.
Hookes law in shear
xy = G xy yz = G yz zx = G zx
where G is the modulus of rigidity or shear modulus.

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SHEARING STRAIN VS. SHEARING STRESS
Generalized Hooks Law for a Homogeneous and Isotropic

2 - 72
Material under Most General Stress Condition:

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RELATION AMONG E, , AND G
An axially loaded slender bar will elongate in the axial

2 - 73
direction and contract in the transverse directions.

An initially cubic element oriented as in figure will


deform into a rectangular parallelepiped. The axial
load produces a normal strain.
J.S. Chen
RELATION AMONG E, , AND G

2 - 74
If the cubic element is oriented as in the figure, it will
deform into a rhombus. Axial load also results in a shear
strain.

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RELATION AMONG E, , AND G

2 - 75
Before After

tan a tan b
tan(a b) =
1 + tan a tan b

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