Title: ME 101: Materials and Stresses
1ME 101Materials and Stresses
2Job of Mechanical Engineer
- Design Hardware/Components
- Must not fail when loaded with expected forces
- Must be reliable
- Must be safe
- What is failure?
- Break/fracture
- Distortion?
3Component Failure
- What causes failure?
- Excessive loads for given geometric dimensions
- Forces, moments, pressures, impacts, etc.
- How do we design to avoid failure?
- Dimensions of component
- Stresses intensity of forces applied over an
area - Material selection
- Strength ability of material to support and
withstand applied stresses - If strength gt stress, no failure?
- Not always (repeated loading cycle fatigue)
4Case Study
- The DeHavilland Comet - the worlds first jet
airliner (1952)
- Aircraft and
- company
- destroyed by
- stress fractures
- study of
- Solid Mechanics
- and Strength of
- Materials
5Mechanics
- Statics and Dynamics
- Treat bodies as rigid do not change when forces
are applied - Real bodies are not rigid and will deform and/or
fracture - Solid Mechanics
- Study of the deformation of solid structures
- Consider different materials under loads
- Consider how body deforms and if it will fail
- Strength of materials
6Deformation
Elastic Deformation not permanent, return to
original shape/dimensions when force is
removed Plastic Deformation permanent, when
force is removed shape/dimensions remain changed
Consider a paper clip
7Axial Stress
To be in equilibrium, force must be carried by
the rod at each cross section
Note s is perpendicular to area A
Depicted as a concentrated force, but influence
is assumed to be equally distributed over cross
sectional area
8Tension and Compression
F
F
Tension
F
F
Compression
Units?
or
9Unit Prefixes and Conversions
- kilo (k) mega (M) giga (G)
- 103 106 109
10Example
- A 6 steel rod, 1/4 in diameter is used as the
shaft to support a 500 lb load - What is the stress in the rod?
11Strain
F
F
Lo
Lf
Units?
Typically very small (0.005 or 0.5for example)
12Stress and Strain
13Hookes Law
k
14Stress-Strain Curve
(Elastic Modulus or Youngs Modulus)
Unit of force per unit area Physical material
property (slope of stress-strain curve)
Frequently used Esteel 210 GPa
(30Mpsi) Ealuminum 70 GPa (10Mpsi)
15Lateral (Diameter) Effects
P
P
P
P
Diameter will contract/enlarge with
tension/compression. Cross-sectional effect
known as Poissons contraction or expansion
represents dimensional change that occurs
perpendicular to the direction of applied force.
Material property to quantify contraction/expansio
n Poissons ratio, ?
16Poissons Ratio
Tension typically reduces diameter Compression
typically increases diameter
- Typical values for Poissons ratio are 0.25 to
0.35 - Steel and most metals 0.29
- Granite 0.25
- Rubber 0.5
17What About the Plastic Region?
Below A Elastic with stress and strain
proportional Between A and B - Elastic but stress
and strain not proportional Beyond B - Permanent
deformation starts occurring Beyond D - Material
cannot sustain stress and material deteriorates
until fracture
18Yielding to Fracture
19Example
- d 10 mm, tensioned to 4kN
- Draw FBD and calculate ?
20Example
- d 10 mm, L 325mm, ? 50.9MPa, E 210GPa
- Calculate ?, ?L, and ?d of U-bolt