Lichauco Activity5ansys
Lichauco Activity5ansys
Lichauco Activity5ansys
ACTIVITY NO. 5
By:
LICHAUCO,ANTOINNE NATHANIEL S.
BS ME III
Submitted To:
ENGR. JESSREY MARK B. SOLIJON
Instructor
In Partial Fulfillment
Of the Requirements for the Course
ME 3171: COMPUTER APPLICATIONS FOR ME
(7:30-8:30 W)
November 15, 2022
DISCUSSION OF THEORY
Tensile testing is a destructive test process that provides information about
the tensile strength, yield strength, and ductility of the metallic material. It
measures the force required to break a composite or plastic specimen and the
extent to which the specimen stretches or elongates to that breaking point.
Tensile testing also provides tensile strength (at yield and at break), tensile
modulus, tensile strain, elongation, and percent elongation at yield, elongation,
and elongation at break in percent http://www.intertek.com/polymers/tensile-
testing/. In-plane tensile testing of plain composite laminates is the most common
test. Tensile tests are also performed on resin-impregnated bundles of fibers
(“tows”), through thickness specimens (cut from thick sections of laminates), and
sections of sandwich core materials: https://www.qualitymag.com/articles/91960-
mechanical-testing-of-composites. Alignment is critical for composite testing
applications because composites are anisotropic and generally brittle, as the
anisotropy means that the properties and strength of the material differ depending
on the direction of the applied force or load. Thus, the tensile strength of a
composite material is very high in the direction parallel to the fiber orientation,
while the tensile strength is much lower if tested in any other direction.
Interestingly, to determine maximum tensile strength in the direction parallel to
the fiber direction, the tensile test must have superior axial-load-string alignment,
primarily critical in the aerospace industry, where composites are often applied in
high-tensile-stress structures. Currently, a range of proven gripping mechanisms
including manual, pneumatic, and hydraulic actuation is available for ambient,
subambient, and high-temperature testing, ranging between −269 and 600°C.
A material's tensile strength is probably the first and foremost concern amongst designers,
materials suppliers. Ultimate tensile strength (UTS) is the maximum stress that a material
can withstand while being stretched or pulled before breaking. The force is measured with
the test machine’s load cell and converted to stress by the test machine’s controller
software. UTS is calculated by dividing the peak tension force the test sample withstands by
its cross sectional area. Tensile testing is a common materials test in which the test sample
is subjected to a controlled tension load until it breaks. The tensile strength may differ from
the specimen's strength at break, depending on whether the material is brittle, ductile, or
both. In the case of brittle materials the ultimate tensile strength is close to the yield point,
whereas in ductile materials the ultimate tensile strength is typically higher.
Properties that are directly measured via a tensile strength test include ultimate tensile
strength, breaking strength, maximum elongation and reduction in area. The ultimate
tensile strength is found by performing a tensile test and recording the engineering stress.
The highest point of the stress-displacement curve is the ultimate tensile strength and has
units of stress.
A tensile test is used to check the quality of different materials based on their properties such
as ductility, hardness, yield strength, and tensile strength. When selecting materials for a
final product or prototype, you need to know if they will stand up to real-world use. Every
material has a breaking point, so knowing how strong your materials are can alert you if you
are using something that won’t hold up well under stress. When choosing fabrics, metal
alloys, paper pulp and other raw materials, a tensile test can help you select the strongest
available options.
Computer Simulation
A. Geometry - contains the dimensions used for your geometry, including a screenshot of
your geometry in Ansys.
B. Materials - contains the specifications used in the model in terms of its materials. Specify
any property/properties of the material that you have altered during the simulation
process.
C. Mesh - contains the discretization process that you have done in your computer
simulation, including the element size and order with a screenshot of your meshing
process in Ansys.
D. Set up - contains the initial, boundary, and loading conditions that you have implied in
your computer simulation. Including the magnitudes, directions, and where the initial,
boundary, and loading conditions are placed in the model.
STANDARD EARTH GRAVITY
FORCE
FIXED SUPPORT
E. Solution - contains the required solution packages that are required in the computer
simulation. Details will be provided to you for each activity.
TOTAL DEFORMATION
DIRECTIONAL DEFORMATION
Observation and Conclusion
From the simulation, it can be seen that for the case the solution is no error occurred
and he result is completely precise and goof.
In making the model some error occurred but we have or I have a chance to fic it in
time.
Appendices
- Contains the supplementary photos (screenshots), charts, figures, etc.
References
• https://www.testresources.net/applications/test-types/tensile-test/
• https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/engineering/tensile-testing
• https://labtesting.com/services/materials-testing/mechanical-
testing/tensile-testing/