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Material Behavior: Constitutive Equations: Field of The Game

The document summarizes material behavior and constitutive equations. It discusses uniaxial behavior and stress-strain relationships. Generalized Hooke's law relates stresses and strains for 3D linear elastic materials using elastic moduli. Anisotropic, orthotropic, and transversely isotropic materials have varying degrees of directional dependence in their elastic properties.

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Dobromir Dinev
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
29 views7 pages

Material Behavior: Constitutive Equations: Field of The Game

The document summarizes material behavior and constitutive equations. It discusses uniaxial behavior and stress-strain relationships. Generalized Hooke's law relates stresses and strains for 3D linear elastic materials using elastic moduli. Anisotropic, orthotropic, and transversely isotropic materials have varying degrees of directional dependence in their elastic properties.

Uploaded by

Dobromir Dinev
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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Lecture 3

Material behavior: Constitutive


equations
Field of the game
Print version Lecture on Theory of Elasticity and Plasticity

Dr. D. Dinev, Department of Structural Mechanics, UACEG


3.1

Contents
1 Uniaxial behavior 1

2 Generalized Hooke’s law 3


2.1 Anisotropy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2.2 Orthotropy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2.3 Transversal isotropy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2.4 Isotropy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 3.2

1 Uniaxial behavior
Uniaxial behavior

Tensile test
• The mechanical behavior of the real materials commonly is studied by an experimental
testing. The simple tension test is a technique which established the uniaxial behavior
of the material. The test consists of a specially prepared cylindrical specimen which is
loaded axially in a testing machine. The strain is determined by change in length between
prescribed reference marks.
3.3

Uniaxial behavior

1
Stress-strain diagram
• Yield point
• Before the yield point- elastic zone
• After the yield point- large plastic deformation begins
3.4

Uniaxial behavior
Constitutive equations
• The tensile test leads to

σxx = Eεxx
σyy = σzz = 0
σxz = σyz = σzx = 0

where E is the Young’s modulus


• The shear strains are εxz = εyz = εzx = 0
• The remaining normal strain components are

εyy = εzz = −νεxx

• Poisson’s ratio
lateral strain εyy
ν =− =−
axial strain εxx
3.5

Uniaxial behavior

Stress-strain relation
• Robert Hooke (1635-1703)
• Original formulation of the Hooke’s law as a Latin anagram
– CEIINOSSITTUV = UT TENSIO, SIC VIS
– As is the extension, so is the force
– In modern language ”the extension is proportional to the force”
3.6

2
Uniaxial behavior

Stress-strain relation
• Thomas Young (1773-1829)
3.7

Uniaxial behavior

Stress-strain relation
• Siméon Denis Poisson (1781-1840)
3.8

2 Generalized Hooke’s law


Generalized Hooke’s law
3D-case
• 3D-constitutive law for linear elastic material

σxx = C11 εxx +C12 εyy +C13 εzz + 2C14 εxy + 2C15 εyz + 2C16 εzx
σyy = C21 εxx +C22 εyy +C23 εzz + 2C24 εxy + 2C25 εyz + 2C26 εzx
.............................................
σzx = C61 εxx +C62 εyy +C63 εzz + 2C64 εxy + 2C65 εyz + 2C66 εzx

    
σxx C11 C12 C16 εxx
 σyy   C21  εyy 
    

 σzz  
=

 εzz 


 σxy  
 

 2εxy 

 σyz    2εyz 
σzx C61 C66 2εzx
3.9

3
Generalized Hooke’s law
3D-case
• In tensor and index notations

σ =C:ε or σi j = Ci jkl εkl

where Ci jkl is forth-order elasticity tensor with the elastic moduli (constants) of the mate-
rial
• In general case 9 strains are related to 9 stresses by 81 elastic constants
• The elastic tensor is a symmetric tensor due to the symmetry of the σ and ε
• Thus the elastic moduli can be reduced up to 21 independent constants
3.10

2.1 Anisotropy
Generalized Hooke’s law
3D-case
• Anisotropy
    
σxx C11 C12 C13 C14 C15 C16 εxx

 σyy  
  C22 C23 C24 C25 C26 
 εyy 


 σzz  
= C33 C34 C35 C36 
 εzz 


 σxy  
  C44 C45 C46 
 2εxy 

 σyz   sym. C55 C56  2εyz 
σzx C66 2εzx
3.11

2.2 Orthotropy
Generalized Hooke’s law
3D-case
• Orthotropy
    
σxx C11 C12 C13 0 0 0 εxx

 σyy  
  C22 C23 0 0 0 
 εyy 


 σzz  
= C33 0 0 0 
 εzz 


 σxy  
  C44 0 0 
 2εxy 

 σyz   sym. C55 0  2εyz 
σzx C66 2εzx

Note
There is no interaction between normal stresses and shear strains
3.12

2.3 Transversal isotropy


Generalized Hooke’s law
3D-case
• Transversal isotropy
    
σxx C11 C12 C13 0 0 0 εxx
 σyy  
   C11 C13 0 0 0 
 εyy 

 σzz   C33 0 0 0  εzz 
 σxy  = 
    
   C44 0 0 
 2εxy 

 σyz   sym. C44 0  2εyz 
C11 −C12
σzx 2
2εzx
3.13

4
2.4 Isotropy
Generalized Hooke’s law
3D-case
• Isotropy- the material moduli are the same in all directions (independent of the orientation
of the coordinate system)
• Only two independent elastic constants are needed to describe the material behavior
– Young modulus- E
– Poisson’s ratio- ν
• Normal strains
σxx σyy σzz
εxx = −ν −ν
E E E
σxx σyy σzz
εyy = −ν + −ν
E E E
σxx σyy σzz
εzz = −ν −ν +
E E E
3.14

Generalized Hooke’s law


Isotropy
• In matrix form
    
εxx 1 −ν −ν σxx
1
 εyy  =  −ν 1 −ν   σyy 
E
εzz −ν −ν 1 σzz

• Inverse relation is
    
σxx 1−ν ν ν εxx
E
 σyy  =  ν 1−ν ν   εyy 
(1 + ν)(1 − 2ν)
σzz ν ν 1−ν εzz
1
• Limits of the Poisson’s ratio- −1 ≤ ν ≤ 2
3.15

Generalized Hooke’s law

Isotropy
• Auxetics material- a material that has a negative Poisson’s ratio
3.16

5
Generalized Hooke’s law

Isotropy
• Shear strains
σxy = Gγxy = 2Gεxy
• Shear modulus
E
G=
2(1 + ν)
3.17

Generalized Hooke’s law


Isotropy
• Complete stress-strain relation is
1 −ν −ν 0 0 0
    
εxx σxx
 εyy   1 −ν 0 0 0  σyy 
 1
1 0 0 0
  
 εzz σzz
= 
   
 2εxy 2(1 − ν) 0 0
  
 E  σxy 
 2ε
yz
  sym. 2(1 − ν) 0  σyz 
2εzx 2(1 − ν) σzx
3.18

Generalized Hooke’s law


Isotropy
• Inverse relation
 
σxx
 σyy 

σzz
 E
= ×
 
 (1 + ν)(1 − 2ν)
 σxy

 σyz 
σzx
1−ν 0 0 0
  
ν ν εxx
 1−ν ν 0 0 0   εyy 

 1−ν 0 0 0 
  εzz


1−2ν

 2 0 0   2εxy
 

1−2ν   2ε
 sym. 2 0 yz

1−2ν 2εzx
2

3.19

Generalized Hooke’s law


Isotropy
• Another representation of the constitutive equations
    
σxx 2µ + λ λ λ 0 0 0 εxx

 σyy  
  2µ + λ λ 0 0 0 
 εyy 


 σzz  
= 2µ + λ 0 0 0 
 εzz 


 σxy  
  2µ 0 0 
 εxy 

 σyz   sym. 2µ 0  εyz 
σzx 2µ εzx
3.20

6
Generalized Hooke’s law
Isotropy
• Where
E
µ =G= − Shear modulus
2(1 + ν)
νE
λ= − Dilatation constant
(1 + ν)(1 − 2ν)

• The above coefficients are known as Lammé coefficients


3.21

Generalized Hooke’s law

Isotropy
• Gabriel Lamé (1795-1870)
3.22

Generalized Hooke’s law


Example
• The isotropic material was tested with two states of stress
– State 1- A shear stress σxy = 80000 gives a shear strain εxy = 10
– State 2- A normal stress σxx = 360000 gives normal strains εxx = 20, εyy = 15 and
εzz = 15
• Calculate the Lamé constants
• Calculate the Young’s modulus and Poisson’s ratio
• Determine the remaining normal stress components
3.23

Generalized Hooke’s law

The End
• Any questions, opinions, discussions?
3.24

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