Chap 8 Mechnical Properties of Metal
Chap 8 Mechnical Properties of Metal
Chap 8 Mechnical Properties of Metal
Mechanical Properties
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ISSUES TO ADDRESS...
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Introduction - Mechanical Properties of Metals
• Material when in service are subjected to forces or loads.
• Thus it is necessary to know the characteristics of the
material and to design the member so that deformation will
not be excessive and fracture will not occur .
• Mechanical properties of material reflects the relationship
between its responds or deformation to an applied force.
• Key mechanical design properties are:
• Stiffness,
• Strength
• Hardness
• Ductility
• Toughness
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Types of loading
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Elastic Deformation
1. Initial 2. Small load 3. Unload
bonds
stretch
return to
initial
d
F
F Linear-
elastic
Elastic means reversible! Non-Linear-
elastic
d
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Plastic Deformation (Metals)
1. Initial 2. Small load 3. Unload
bonds
stretch planes
& planes still
shear sheared
dplastic
delastic + plastic
F
F
Plastic means permanent! linear linear
elastic elastic
d
dplastic
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Engineering Stress
• (2)Shear stress, t:
• (1) Tensile stress, s:
Ft F
Ft
Area, Ao Fs
Area, Ao
Fs
Ft Fs Ft
t= F
Ft Ao
s= = N
Ao m2
original area
before loading
7 Stress has units: N/m2
Common States of Stress
• Simple tension: cable
F F
A o = cross sectional
area (when unloaded)
F
s= s s
Ao
Ski lift (photo courtesy
• Torsion (a form of shear): drive shaft P.M. Anderson)
M Fs Ao
Ac
Fs
t =
Ao
M
2R Note: t = M/AcR here.
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OTHER COMMON STRESS STATES (i)
• Simple compression:
Ao
F
s=
Note: compressive
Balanced Rock, Arches structure member
National Park
(photo courtesy P.M. Anderson)
Ao (s < 0 here).
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OTHER COMMON STRESS STATES (ii)
• Bi-axial tension: • Hydrostatic compression:
sz > 0 sh< 0
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Engineering Strain
• Tensile strain: • Lateral strain:
d/2
-dL
e = d eL =
Lo Lo wo
wo
dL /2
• Shear strain: is the tangent of the strain angle q
q
x g = x/y = tan q
y 90º - q
Strain is always
90º dimensionless.
11 Adapted from Fig. 6.1(a) and (c), Callister & Rethwisch 8e.
Stress-Strain Testing • Typical tensile
specimen
• Typical tensile test
machine
gauge
length
Adapted from
Fig. 6.2,
Callister &
Rethwisch 8e.
Adapted from Fig. 6.3, Callister & Rethwisch 8e. (Fig. 6.3 is taken from H.W.
Hayden, W.G. Moffatt, and J. Wulff, The Structure and Properties of Materials,
12III, Mechanical Behavior, p. 2, John Wiley and Sons, New York, 1965.)
Vol.
Before test
13 Polymer sample
Stress Strain Behaviour -Linear Elastic Properties
• Modulus of Elasticity, E:
(also known as Young's modulus)
• Hooke's Law:
s=Ee s F
E
e
Linear-
elastic F
simple
tension
test
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Poisson's ratio, n
eL
• Poisson's ratio, n:
eL
n=-
e
The ration of lateral and axial e
strain
metals: n ~ 0.25 -0.35 -n
ceramics: n ~ 0.25
polymers: n ~ 0.40
109 Pa 20 GFRE*
CFRE *
G raphite G FRE( fibers)*
10
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High modulus of
C FRE( fibers) *
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Polyester
AFRE( fibers) * elasticity – relatively
4 PET
PS stiff, do not deflect
PC Epoxy only
2 easily.
PP
1 HDP E
0.8
0.6 Wood( grain)
PTF E
0.4
16 0.2 LDPE
Plastic (Permanent) Deformation
(at lower temperatures, i.e. T < Tmelt/3)
Elastic
initially
permanent (plastic)
after load is removed
ep engineering strain, e
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Tensile properties - Yield Strength, sy
• Stress at which noticeable plastic deformation has
occurred.
when ep = 0.002
tensile stress, s
sy = yield strength
sy
engineering strain, e
ep = 0.002 Adapted from Fig. 6.10(a),
Callister & Rethwisch 8e.
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Yield Strength : Comparison
Graphite/
Metals/ Composites/
Ceramics/ Polymers
Alloys fibers
Semicond
2000
Steel (4140) qt
1000
Yield strength, sy (MPa)
Ti (5Al-2.5Sn) a
Hard to measure,
Al (6061) ag
200 Steel (1020) hr
¨
Ti (pure) a
Ta (pure)
Cu (71500) hr Based on data in Table B.4,
Callister & Rethwisch 8e.
100
a = annealed
dry
70 PC
hr = hot rolled
60 Nylon 6,6 ag = aged
50 Al (6061) a PET
cd = cold drawn
40 PVC humid
cw = cold worked
PP
30 HDPE qt = quenched & tempered
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19 LDPE
Tin (pure)
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Tensile Strength, TS
• Maximum stress on engineering stress-strain curve.
Adapted from Fig. 6.11,
Callister & Rethwisch 8e.
TS
F = fracture or
sy
ultimate
engineering
strength
stress
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Example Problem (6.1callister)
Elongation (elastic) Computation
A piece of copper originally 305mm long is pulled in tension
with a stress of 276MPa. If the deformation is elastic, what
will be the resultant elongation. E for copper is 110Gpa
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A steel specimen of 12.5 mm diameter and 62.5 mm gauge was tested in a
standard tension test. Following observations were made during the test:
Determine :
(i)Percentage elongation
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Stress-Strain Diagram
ultimate
tensile
s
strength 3 necking
UTS
Strain
s
yield
strength y Hardening Fracture
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2
Plastic
Region
σ = Eε
σ 1
E=
ε Elastic Strain ( e ) (L/Lo)
Region
True Stress & Strain
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Ductility
Lf - Lo
• Plastic tensile strain at failure: %EL = x 100
Lo
smaller %EL Lf is the fracture length
Lo is commonly 50mm
Engineering
tensile
stress, s larger %EL Ao
Lo Af Lf
Adapted from Fig. 6.13,
Callister & Rethwisch 8e.
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Toughness
• Material's resistance to fracture when crack.
•Ability of a material to absorb energy and plastically deform before
fracturing.
•Energy to break a unit volume of material.
• Approximate by the area under the stress-strain curve.
•For a metal to be tough it must display both strength and ductility
Ur = sde
0
If we assume a linear
stress-strain curve this
simplifies to
1
U r s ye y
Adapted from Fig. 6.15,
2
31 Callister & Rethwisch 8e.
Hardening
• An increase in sy due to plastic deformation.
s
large hardening
sy
1
sy small hardening
0
e
• Curve fit to the stress-strain response:
hardening exponent:
sT = K eT
n n = 0.15 (some steels)
to n = 0.5 (some coppers)
“true” stress (F/A) “true” strain: ln(L/Lo)
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Hardness
• A measure of material's resistance to localized plastic deformation.
• Resistance to permanently indenting the surface.
• Large hardness means:
-- resistance to plastic deformation or cracking in
compression.
-- better wear properties.
apply known force measure size
e.g., of indent after
10 mm sphere removing load
Smaller indents
D d mean larger
hardness.
increasing hardness
Mohs scale
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Hardness: Measurement
Rockwell
Indenters – spherical and hardened steel balls
No major sample damage
Each scale runs to 130 but only useful in range 20-100.
Initial minor load 10 kg
Followed by major load 60 (A), 100 (B) & 150 (C) kg
A = diamond, B = 1/16 in. ball, C = diamond
HB = Brinell Hardness
Similar to Rockwell but load is maintained constant for a specified time (10-30 sec)
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Hardness: Measurement
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Variability in Material Properties
The measure material properties are not exact quantities.
Due to test method, fabrication procedure, operator bias,
inhomogeneities within the same lot of materials
Design engineer needs to realize that that scatter and variability are
inevitable and must be dealt appropriately.
Use statistics n
Xn
Mean X =
n
1
n
Xi - X
2 2
S=
n -1
Standard Deviation
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
Reading:
Core Problems:
Next topic : Mechanical failures
Self-help Problems:
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