Applied Mechanics - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Applied Mechanics

Description:

Deformable Body Mechanics Engr .Saeed Ahmed Maitlo Lecturer Institute of Biomedical Technology LUMHS Jamshoro Applied Mechanics Rigid Body Mechanics Statics Dynamics ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:286
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 17
Provided by: Steve2189
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Applied Mechanics


1
(No Transcript)
2
Deformable Body Mechanics
  • Engr .Saeed Ahmed Maitlo
  • Lecturer
  • Institute of Biomedical Technology LUMHS Jamshoro

3
Applied Mechanics
  • Rigid Body Mechanics
  • Statics
  • Dynamics
  • Kinematics
  • Kinetics
  • Deformable Body Mechanics
  • Elasticity
  • Plasticity
  • Viscoelasticity
  • Fluid Mechanmics
  • Liquids
  • Gases

4
Deformable Body Mechanics
  • The mechanics of deformable bodies is the field
    that is concerned with the deformability of
    objects. An elastic body is defined as one in
    which all deformations are recoverable upon
    removal of external forces. this feature of some
    materials can easily be visualized by observing a
    spring or a rubber band.
  • If you stretch (deform) a spring and then release
    it (remove the applied force), it will resume
    its original (unreformed) size and shape.

5
  • A plastic body ,on the other hand, undergoes
    permanent (unrecoverable) deformations.
  • Again use a spring apply a large force on spring
    so as to stretch the spring extensively, and then
    release it. the spring will bounce back, but
    there may be increase in its length.
  • Note that depending on the extent and duration of
    applied forces, a material may exhibit elastic or
    elastoplastic as in the case of spring

6
Elasticity
The beam can bend to conform to the constraints
of the supports.
7
Elasticity vs. Plasticity
Elastic You can bend it, but it will come right
back when you remove the external force (like a
spring). Plastic You can bend it, and it will
stay where it left off (like soldering
wire). Some materials tend to behave elastically,
some plastically, but. Almost all materials will
have both behaviors. Small deflection
elastic. Large deflection plastic.
8
VISCOELASTICITY
  • First define what is known as a fluid. in
    general, materials are classified as either solid
    or fluid. When an external force is applied to a
    solid body, the body will deform will certain
    extent. the continuous application of the same
    force will not necessarily deform the solid body
    continuously.

9
  • on the other hand , a continuously applied force
    on a fluid body will cause a continuous
    deformation (flow).viscosity is a fluid property
    that is quantitative measure of resistance to
    flow.
  • In nature there are some materials that have both
    fluid and solid properties. the term viscoelastic
    is used to refer to the mechanical properties of
    such materials exhibit viscoelastic properties.

10
Elasticity vs. Viscoelasticity
Elastic Force is proportional to deflection
(e.g. a spring). Viscoelastic Force is
proportional deflection AND to rate of deflection
(e.g. silly putty). Viscous Force is
proportional to deflection only (e.g. a shock
absorber or a fluid).
11
BASIC CONCEPTS
  • Engineering mechanics is based on Newtonian
    mechanics in which the basic concepts are
  • Length
  • Time
  • Mass
  • These are absolute concepts because they are
    independent of each other
  • Length is a concepts for describing size
    quantitatively

12
  • Time is a concepts for ordering the flow of
    events.
  • Mass is the property of all matter and is the
    quantitative measure of inertia. inertia is the
    resistance to the change in motion of matter.

13
Newton's Second Law
  • Acceleration is produced when a force acts on a
    mass. The greater the mass (of the object being
    accelerated) the greater the amount of force
    needed (to accelerate the object).

14
Example
  • Mike's car, which weighs 1,000 kg, is out of gas.
    Mike is trying to push the car to a gas station,
    and he makes the car go 0.05 m/s/s. Using
    Newton's Second Law, you can compute how much
    force Mike is applying to the car.
  • F ma 10000.5
  • Answer 50 newtons

15
Newton's Third Law
  • Newton's third law states that to every body
    action there is always an equal reaction, and
    that the force of action

16
Presentation topics
  • laws of triangle.
  • Parallelogram.
  • Polygon forces.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com