Chapter 1-Elasticity
Chapter 1-Elasticity
Elasticity deals with elastic stresses and strains, their relationship and the
external forces that cause them. An elastic strain is defined as strain that
disappears instantaneously once the forces that cause it are removed. It is
very essential to understand the micro and macromechanical problems.
Examples for micromechanical problems:
stress fields around dislocations, incompatibilities of stresses at the
interface between grains, and dislocation interactions in work hardening.
Examples for macromechanical problems:
Stresses developed in drawing and rolling wire and the analysis of
specimen-machine interactions in tensile for tensile strength.
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This chapter is structured in such a way as to satisfy the needs of both the
undergraduate and the graduate students. A graphical method for the
solution of two-dimensional stress problems (the Mohr circle) is
described. On the other hand, the stress and strain systems in
tridimensional bodies can be better treated as tensors, with the indicial
notation. Once this tensor approach is understood, the student will have
acquired a very helpful visualization of stresses and strains a s
tridimensional entities
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Or upon integration
Where l0 is the original length. This parameter is known as the longitudinal true strain.
In many application, a simpler form of strain, commonly called engineering or nominal
strain, is used. This type of strain is defined as:
In materials that exhibit large amounts of elastic deformation (rubbers, soft biological
tissues, etc.) it is customary to express the deformation by a parameter called ‘stretch’ or
‘stretch ratio’. It is usually expressed as λ
Hence deformation starts at λ=1
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When the strains are reasonably small the engineering and the true
strains are approximately the same. Subscript t will be used for true
strain and subscript e will be used for engineering strain. The engineering
strain and true strain can be related as:
The engineering stress and the true stress can be related as following:
E represents the Young’s modulus and is high for metals and ceramics.
E mainly depends on composition, crystallographic structure and nature
of the bonding of the elements. Heat and mechanic treatment have little
effect on E as long as they do not affect the former parameters. Hence,
annealed and cold rolled steel have the same Young’s modulus, there
are, of course, small differences due to formation of cold rolled texture.
E decreases slightly with increases in temperature.
In monocrystals (single crystals) E shows different values for different
crystallographic orientations. In polycrystalline aggregates that do not
exhibit any texture, E is isotropic. It has the same value in all
directions.
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The values of E shown in tables are usually obtained by dynamic
methods involving the propagation of elastic waves, not from stress-
strain tests. Elastic wave is passed through a sample, the velocity of the
longitudinal and shear waves, Vl and Vs, respectively are related to the
elastic constants, by means of the mathematical expressions: ρ is the
density, E is the Young’s Modulus and G is the shear modulus.
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Strain Energy (Deformation Energy) Density
When work is done on a body, its dimensions change. The work done
(W) is converted into a heat (Q) and an increase in internal energy (U) of
the body. We can write as per the first law of thermodynamics.
The units of strain energy are J/m3 or N.m/m3 or N/ m2. The last one is the same as the
units of stress. It should not cause any confusion if the reader will recall that the strain is
a dimensionless quantity. Note that the strain energy is a scalar quantity, hence no
indexes. For a linearly elastic solid under a uniaxial stress we can use the Hooke’s law
to obtain an alternate expression for the strain energy density:
One can extend the concept of elastic strain energy density to region of inelastic
behavior by defining the strain energy density as the area under the stress-strain curve
of a material. Sometimes, we take this area under the stress-strain curve as a measure
of the toughness of a material
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Shear Stress and Strain The specimen is placed between a punch and a base
having a cyclindirical orifice; the punch compresses
the specimen. The internal resistance to the external
forces now has the nature of a shear. The small cube
in (b) was removed from the region being sheared
between punch and base. It is distorted in such a way
that the perpendicularity of the faces is lost. The shear
stresses and strains are defined as:
For metals and ceramics and certain polymers (the Hookean solids), the
proportionality between shear stress and shear strain is observed in the
elastic regimen. In analogy with Young’s modulus, a transverse elasticity,
called the rigidity or shear modulus is defined:
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Unit cube in a body subjected to tridimensional stress; only
stresses on the three exposed faces if the cube are shown.
A body, upon being pulled in tension, tends to contract
laterally. The stresses are defined in a tridimensional body
and they have two indices. The first indicates the plane (or
the normal to the plane) on which they are acting; the
second indicates the direction in which they are pointing.
These stresses are schematically shown acting on three
faces of a unit cube in Figure a. The normal stresses have
two identical subscripts: σ11 ,σ22 , σ33 . The shear stresses
have two different subscripts: σ12 ,σ13 , σ23 .These subscripts
refer to the reference system Ox1,x2 ,x3. If this notation is
used, both normal and shear stresses are designated by the
same letter, lower case sigma. On the other hand, in more
simplified cases where we are dealing with only one normal
one shear stress component, σ and τ will be used,
respectively; this notation will be maintained throughout the
text. In Figure the stress σ33 generates strains ε11 ,ε22 , ε33 .
Since the initial dimensions of the cube are equal to 1, the
changes in length are equal to the strains. Poisson’s ratio is
defined as the ratio between the lateral and the longitudinal
Unit cube being strains. Both ε11 , ε22 , are negative (signifying a decrease in
extended in length), and ε33 is positive. In order for Poisson’s ratio to be
direction Ox positive, the negative sign is used.
3
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Hence,
Neglecting the cross products of the strains, because they are orders of
magnitude smaller than the strains themselves, we have
Since V=V0
For the isotropic case, the two lateral contractions are the same (ε11 = ε22 ). Hence,
We set,
Thus:
The lower bound for Poisson’s ratio is obtained by deforming a body and assuming that
its volume remains constant, as was done earlier in this section. Thus:
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MORE COMPLEX STATE OF STRESS
The generalized Hooke’s law (as the set of equations relating tridimensional stresses
and strains is called) is derived next, for an isotropic solid. It is assumed that shear
stresses can generate only shear strains. Thus, the longitudinal strains are produced
exclusively by the normal stresses. σ11 generates the following strain:
For σ22 :
For σ33 :
The opposite case, in which one of the dimensions is infinite with respect to the other
two, is treated under the assumption of plane strain. If one dimension is infinite, strain in
it is constrained; hence, one has two dimensions left. This state is called bidimensional
or, more commonly plane strain. It also occurs when strain is constrained in one
direction by some other means. A long dam is constrained. Yet another state of stress is
pure shear, when there are no normal stresses.
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Pure Shear: Relationship between G and E
Eqn. 1
We have, for the shear stresses (using the normal, and not the Mohr, sign convention),
Eqn. 2
But we also have,
Eqn. 3
Hence,
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Anisotropic Effects
Figure shows that a general stress system acting on a unit cube has nine components
and is a symmetrical tensor. (The off-diagonal components are equal)
When the unit cube in the figure is rotated, the stress state at that point doesnot change;
however, the components of stress change. The same applies to strains. A general state
of strain is descirbed by:
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We can also use a matrix notation for stresses and strains, replacing the indices by the
following
But: