Mechanical Properties of Metals

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Mechanical properties

of metals
Why Study The Mechanical Properties of
Metals?
 It is necessary for engineers to understand how the various mechanical
properties are measured and what these properties represent; they may be
called upon to design structures/components using predetermined materials
such that unacceptable levels of deformation and/or failure will not occur.
 Components made of steel alloys that are exposed to external stresses and forces
must be processed so as to have appropriate levels of mechanical characteristics
(i.e., stiffness, strength, ductility, and toughness). Thus, it is essential that the
designer or engineer understand the significance of these properties, and, in
addition, develop a sense of perspective as to acceptable magnitudes of property
values.
STRESS AND STRAIN


  
Engineering stress σ is defined by the relationship:

σ =F/
Where
F is the instantaneous load applied perpendicular to the specimen cross-section, in units of Newton (N)

is the original cross-sectional area before any load is applied ().

The units of engineering stress (referred to subsequently as just stress) are Mega Pascal's, MPa (SI)
(where 1 MPa = N/)
STRESS AND STRAIN

  Engineering strain is defined according to the following expression

ϵ==
 in which is the original length before any load is applied and is the
instantaneous length. Sometimes the quantity - is denoted as and is the
deformation elongation or change in length at some instant, as referenced to the
original length.
 Engineering strain (subsequently called just strain) is unitless, since it is a ratio of
two lengths.
Diagrams
(a) Schematic
illustration of how a
tensile load produces
an elongation and
positive linear strain.
Dashed lines
represent the shape
before deformation;
solid lines, after
deformation.
(b) Schematic
illustration of how a
compressive load
produces contraction
and a negative linear
strain.
STRESS–STRAIN BEHAVIOR

 The degree to which a structure deforms or strains depends on the magnitude of


an imposed stress.
 For most metals that are stressed in tension and at relatively low levels, stress
and strain are proportional to each other through the relationship

σ = Eϵ
 This is known as Hooke’s law, and the constant of proportionality E is the
modulus of elasticity, or Young’s modulus.
 Deformation in which stress and strain are proportional is called elastic
deformation; a plot of stress versus strain results in a linear relationship, as
shown in the diagram in the next slide.
STRESS–STRAIN BEHAVIOR CONT’D

The slope of this linear segment corresponds


to the modulus of elasticity E.

This modulus may be thought of as stiffness, or a


material’s resistance to elastic deformation. The greater
the modulus, the stiffer the material, or the smaller the
elastic strain that results from the application of a given
stress.
Example
   Question
A piece of copper originally 305 mm (12 in.) long is pulled in tension with a stress of 276
MPa (40,000 psi). If the deformation is entirely elastic, what will be the resultant
elongation? The value of E for copper is 16x psi.
Solution
The values of ϵ and are given as 276 MPa and 305 mm, respectively,

σ =ϵE =( E
∆l = σ
= 0.77 mm (0.03 in)
Plastic Deformation
 For most metallic materials, elastic deformation persists only to strains of about 0.005. As the
material is deformed beyond this point, the stress is no longer proportional to strain (Hooke’s
law, ceases to be valid), and permanent, non recoverable, or plastic deformation occurs.
 From an atomic perspective, plastic deformation corresponds to the breaking of bonds with
original atom neighbors and then re-forming bonds with new neighbors as large numbers of
atoms or molecules move relative to one another; upon removal of the stress they do not
return to their original positions.
 The diagram below plots schematically the tensile stress–strain behavior into the plastic
region for a typical metal.
Stress–Strain behavior

 Typical stress–
strain behavior for
a metal showing
elastic and plastic
deformations, the
proportional limit P,
and the yield strength
as determined using
the 0.002 strain offset
method.
Ductility
  It is a measure of the degree of plastic deformation that has been sustained at
fracture (ability to be drawn into wires).
 A metal that experiences very little or no plastic deformation upon fracture is termed
brittle.
 Ductility may be expressed quantitatively as either percent elongation or percent
reduction in area. The percent elongation %EL is the percentage of plastic strain at
fracture, or

where is the fracture length and is the original gauge length as mentioned
earlier.
Diagram

Schematic representations of tensile stress–strain behavior for


brittle and ductile metals loaded to fracture
Toughness
 Toughness is a property that is indicative of a material’s resistance to fracture
when a crack (or other stress-concentrating defect) is present
 Another way of defining toughness is as the ability of a material to absorb energy
and plastically deform before fracturing.
 Even though the brittle metal has higher yield and tensile strengths, it has a
lower toughness than the ductile one, as can be seen by comparing the areas
ABC and AB’C’ in the previous diagram.
Hardness

 Hardness is a measure of a material’s resistance to localized plastic deformation


(e.g., a small dent or a scratch).
 Hardness tests are performed more frequently than any other mechanical test for
several reasons:
1. They are simple and inexpensive—ordinarily no special specimen need be
prepared, and the testing apparatus is relatively inexpensive.
2. The test is nondestructive—the specimen is neither fractured nor excessively
deformed; a small indentation is the only deformation.
3. Other mechanical properties often may be estimated from hardness data, such
as tensile strength.
Fatigue

 Fatigue is a form of failure that occurs in structures subjected to dynamic and


fluctuating stresses (e.g., bridges, aircraft, and machine components).
 The term fatigue is used because this type of failure normally occurs after a
lengthy period of repeated stress or strain cycling.
Creep

 Materials are often placed in service at elevated temperatures and exposed to


static mechanical stresses (e.g., turbine rotors in jet engines and steam generators
that experience centrifugal stresses, and high-pressure steam lines). Deformation
under such circumstances is termed creep.
 Defined as the time-dependent and permanent deformation of materials when
subjected to a constant load or stress.

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