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ELASTICITY

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ELASTICITY MATERIALS SCIENCE & ENGINEERING Part of A Learner s Guide Elasticity Elasticity of Composites Viscoelasticity Elasticity of Crystals (Elastic Anisotropy) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ELASTICITY


1
ELASTICITY
  • Elasticity
  • Elasticity of Composites
  • Viscoelasticity
  • Elasticity of Crystals (Elastic Anisotropy)

Elasticity Theory, Applications and
Numerics Martin H. Sadd Elsevier
Butterworth-Heinemann, Oxford (2005)
2
Revise modes of deformation, stress, strain and
other basics (click here) before starting this
chapter etc.
3
Let us start with some observations
  • When you pull a rubber band and release it, the
    band regains it original length.
  • It is much more difficult (requires more load) to
    extend a metal wire as compared to a rubber
    string.
  • It is difficult to extend a straight metal wire
    however, if it is coiled in the form of a spring,
    one gets considerable extensions easily.
  • A rubber string becomes brittle when dipped in
    liquid nitrogen and breaks, when one tries to
    extend the same.
  • A diver gets lift-off using the elastic energy
    stored in the diving board. If the diving board
    is too compliant, the diver cannot get sufficient
    lift-off.
  • A rim of metal is heated to expand the loop and
    then fitted around a wooden wheel (of say a
    bullock cart). On cooling of the rim it fits
    tightly around the wheel.

Click here to know about all the mechanisms by
which materials fail
4
Elasticity
  • Elastic deformation is reversible deformation-
    i.e. when load/forces/constraints are released
    the body returns to its original configuration
    (shape and size).
  • Elastic deformation can be caused by
    tension/compression or shear forces.
  • Usually in metals and ceramics elastic
    deformation is seen at low strains (less than
    103). At higher strains, in addition to elastic
    deformation we get plastic deformation. However,
    other materials can be stretched elastically to
    large strains (few 100).So elastic deformation
    should not be assumed to be small deformation!
  • The elastic behaviour of metals and ceramics is
    usually linear (i.e. the stress strain curve is
    linear).

Linear
E.g. Al deformed at small strains
Elasticity
Non-linear
E.g. deformation of an elastomer like rubber
(or elastic deformation)
5
Time dependent aspects of elastic deformation
  • In normal elastic behaviour (e.g. when small
    load is applied to a metal wire, causing a strain
    within elastic limit) it is assumed that the
    strain is appears instantaneously.
  • Similarly when load beyond the elastic limit is
    applied (in an uniaxial tension test Slide 7 ),
    it is assumed that the plastic strain develops
    instantaneously. It is further assumed that the
    load is applied quasi-statically (i.e. very
    slowly).
  • However, in some cases the elastic or plastic
    strain need not develop instantaneously.
    Elongation may take place at constant load with
    time. These effects are termed Anelasticity (for
    time dependent elastic deformation at constant
    load) and Viscoelasticity. Anelastic materials
    are a subset of viscoelastic materials. In
    anelastic materials the strain is fully
    recoverable and in dynamic loading, the
    stress-strain response depends on the frequency.
    Viscoelastic response depends on the rate of
    loading (strain rate).
  • Creep is one such phenomenon, where permanent
    deformation takes place at constant load (or
    stress). E.g. if sufficient weight is hung at the
    end of a lead wire at room temperature, it will
    elongate and finally fail.

Recoverable
Instantaneous
Elastic
Time dependent
Anelasticity
Deformation
Instantaneous
Plastic
Viscoelasticity
Time dependent
Permanent
6
Atomic model for elasticity
  • At the atomic level elastic deformation takes
    place by the deformation of bonds (change in bond
    length or bond angle).
  • Let us consider the stretching of bonds (leading
    to elastic deformation).
  • Atoms in a solid feel an attractive force at
    larger atomic separations and feel a repulsive
    force (when electron clouds overlap too much)
    at shorter separations. (Of course, at very large
    separations there is no force felt).
  • The energy and the force (which is a gradient of
    the energy field) display functional behaviour as
    in the equations below. This implies under a
    state of compressive stress the atoms want to
    go apart and under tensile stress they want to
    come closer.

Energy
Force
Repulsive
A,B,m,n ? constantsm gt n
Attractive
The plots of these functions is shown in the next
slide
This is one simple form of interatomic
potentials (also called Lennard-Jones potential,
wherein m 12 and n 6).
7
  • The plot of the inter-atomic potential and force
    functions show that at the equilibrium
    inter-atomic separation (r0) the potential energy
    of the system is a minimum and force experienced
    is zero.
  • In reality the atoms are undergoing thermal
    vibration about this equilibrium position. The
    amplitude of vibration increases with increasing
    temperature. Due to the slight left-right
    asymmetry about the minimum in the U-r plot,
    increased thermal vibration leads to an expansion
    of the crystal.

Repulsive
Repulsive
r0
Force (F) ?
Potential energy (U) ?
r ?
r ?
Attractive
r0
Attractive
r0
Equilibrium separation between atoms
8
  • Youngs modulus is the slope of the
    Force-Interatomic spacing curve (F-r curve), at
    the equilibrium interatomic separation (r0). I.e.
    it is the curvature of the energy-displacement
    (interatomic separation) plot.
  • In reality the Elastic modulus is 4th rank tensor
    (Eijkl) and the curve below captures one aspect
    of it.

Youngs modulus (Y / E)
Near r0 the red line (tangent to the F-r curve at
r r0) coincides with the blue line (F-r) curve
  • Youngs modulus is proportional to the ve slope
    of the F-r curve at r r0

r ?
Force ?
r0
For displacements around r0 ? Force-displacement
curve is approximately linear? THE LINEAR
ELASTIC REGION
9
Stress-strain curves in the elastic region
  • In metals and ceramics the elastic strains (i.e.
    the strains beyond which plastic deformation sets
    in or fracture takes place) are very small
    (10?3). As these strains are very small it does
    not matter if we use engineering stress-strain or
    true stress strain values (these concepts will be
    discussed later). The stress-strain plot is
    linear for such materials.
  • Polymers (with special reference to elastomers)
    shown non-linear stress-strain behaviour in the
    elastic region. Rotation of the long chain
    molecules around a C-C bond can cause tensile
    elongation. The elastic strains can be large in
    elastomers (some can even extend a few hundred
    percent), but the modulus (slope of the
    stress-strain plot) is very small. Additionally,
    the behaviour of elastomers in compression is
    different from that in tension.

Tension
Stress-strain curve for an elastomer
Stress ?
?T due to uncoilingof polymer chains
?C
Due to efficient filling of space
Strain ?
?T
?C
?T
gt
Compression
Brittle ceramics may show no plastic
deformation and may fracture after elastic
deformation.
10
Other elastic moduli
  • We have noted that elastic modulus is a 4th rank
    tensor (with 81 components in general in 3D). In
    normal materials this is a symmetric tensor (i.e.
    it is sufficient to consider one set of the
    off-diagonal terms).
  • In practice many of these components may be zero
    and additionally, many of them may have the same
    value (i.e. those surviving terms may not be
    independent). E.g. for a cubic crystal there are
    only 3 independent constants (in two index
    condensed notation these are E11, E12, E44).
  • For an isotropic material the number of
    independent constants is only 2. Typically these
    are chosen as E and ? (though in principle we
    could chose any other two as these moduli are
    interrelated for a isotropic material). More
    explained sooner.
  • In a polycrystal (say made of grains of cubic
    crystal), due to average over all orientations,
    the material behaves like an isotropic material.
    More about this discussed elsewhere.
    Mathematically the isotropic material properties
    can be obtained from single crystal properties by
    Voigt or Reuss averaging.

In tensor notation
  • E ? Youngs modulus
  • G ? Shear modulus
  • K ? Bulk modulus
  • ? ? Poissons ratio

11
Relation between the elastic constants of an
isotropic material
  • We have noted that for an isotropic material, the
    elastic properties are described by two
    independent elastic constants (typically, E
    ?).
  • The other elastic constants like the bulk
    modulus (K) and the shear modulus (G or ?) can
    be derived from these constants by standard
    formulae (e.g. below).? List of elastic moduli
    for isotropic materials Youngs modulus (Y, E),
    Poissons ratio (?), Shear Modulus (G, ?), Bulk
    modulus (K), Lamés constant (?), P-wave modulus
    (M).
  • The relative magnitudes of these constants can be
    seen from the table below.
  • Similar to the stress-strain relation we saw
    before, other types of stresses can be related to
    the corresponding strain via the appropriate
    elastic moduli/constants (as below).

Property Magnitude
Youngs modulus (Y, E) 70 GPa
Poissons ratio 0.3
Shear Modulus (G) 26.9 GPa
Bulk Modulus (K) 58.3 GPa
Lamé constant (?) 40.4 GPa
Click here to know how isotropy can arise in a
material
12
  • When a body is pulled (let us assume an isotropic
    body for now), it will elongate along the pulling
    direction and will contract along the orthogonal
    direction. The negative ratio of the transverse
    strain (?t) to the longitudinal strain (?t) is
    called the Poissions ratio (?).
  • In the equation below as B1 lt B0, the term in
    square brackets in the numerator is ve and
    hence, Poissions ratio is a positive quantity
    (for usual materials). I.e. usual materials
    shrink in the transverse direction, when they are
    pulled.
  • The value of E, G and ? for some common materials
    are in the table (Table-E). Zero and even
    negative Possions ratio have been reported in
    literature. The modulus of materials expected to
    be positive, i.e. the material resists
    deformation and stores energy in the deformed
    condition. However, structures and
    material-structures can display negative
    stiffness (e.g. when a thin rod is pushed it will
    show negative stiffness during bulking? observed
    in displacement control mode).

Initial configuration is represented by 0 in
subscript
13
Elastic properties of some common materials
T1 gives independent elastic constants of a cubic
crystal. T2 lists elastic properties of selected
isotropic materials. F1 shows a stress-strain
plot in the elastic regime of select materials.
T1 Anisotropic Elastic constants for Cubic System 2 Anisotropic Elastic constants for Cubic System 2 Anisotropic Elastic constants for Cubic System 2
T1 E11 (GPa) E44 (GPa) E12 (GPa)
Al 108 28.3 62
Au 190 42.3 161
Cu 169 75.3 122
Fe 230 117 135
Ni 247 122 153
Pd 224 71.6 173
Si 165 79.2 64
F1
T2 Specification E (GPa) ? sy (MPa) ?y (?10?3) Ref.
Metals Aluminum BS 1490 (99 pure) 71 0.345 240 3.4 1
Metals Mild Steel BS 070M20 gt0.2 wt. C 210 0.293 215 1.0 2
Ceramics and Glass Aluminum Oxide (Al2O3) - 350 344.7-408.8 0.21-0.27 255-260.6 (Fracture) 0.7 3
Ceramics and Glass Glass (SiO2) - 73 72.76-74.15 0.166-0.177 69.6-74.53 (Fracture) 1.0 3
Polymers Polyester General purpose grade 4 1.03-4.48 0.33 51.5-55.1 12.5 3
Room temperature data
14
Bonding and Elastic modulus
  • Materials with strong bonds have a deep potential
    energy well with a high curvature ? high elastic
    modulus.
  • Along the period of a periodic table the covalent
    character of the bond and its strength increase ?
    systematic increase in elastic modulus.
  • Down a period the covalent character of the
    bonding ? ? ? in Y.
  • On heating the elastic modulus decreases on
    heating from 0 K ? M.P there is a decrease of
    about 10-20 in modulus (i.e. Youngs modulus is
    not a sensitive function of T).

Along the period ? Li Be B Cdiamond Cgraphite
Atomic number (Z) 3 4 5 6 6
Youngs Modulus (GN / m2) 11.5 289 440 1140 8
Down the row ? Cdiamond Si Ge Sn Pb
Atomic number (Z) 6 14 32 50 82
Youngs Modulus (GN / m2) 1140 103 99 52 16
15
Anisotropy in the Elastic modulus
What is meant by anisotropy (click here Slide
13)?
  • In a crystal the interatomic and inter-planar
    distance varies with direction? this aspect can
    be used to intuitively understand the origin of
    elastic anisotropy. We already know that linear
    and planar densities depend on the specific
    choice (i.e. the 100CCP direction has different
    linear density as compared to the 111CCP and
    similarly, the (100)CCP has a different planar
    density as compared to (111)CCP).
  • In a elastically anisotropic material, stretching
    along certain directions can lead to shearing.
  • Elastic anisotropy is especially pronounced in
    materials with ? two kinds of bonds, e.g. in
    graphite E 10?10 950 GPa, E 0001 8 GPa ?
    Two kinds of ordering along two directions, e.g.
    in Decagonal QC E100000?E000001

16
How to determine the elastic modulus?
  • The Youngs modulus (Y) of a isotropic material
    can be determined from the stress-strain diagram.
    But, this is not a very accurate method, as the
    machine compliance is in series with the specimen
    compliance. The slope of the stress-strain curve
    at any point is termed as the tangent modulus.
    In the initial part of the s-e curve this
    measures the Youngs modulus. Other kinds of
    mechanical tests can also be used for the
    measurement of Y.
  • A better method to measure Y is using wave
    transmission (e.g. ultrasonic pulse echo
    transmission technique) in the material. This is
    best used for homogeneous, isotropic,
    non-dispersive material (wherein, the velocity of
    the wave does not change with frequency). Common
    polycrystalline metals, ceramics and inorganic
    glasses are best suited to this method. Soft
    plastics and rubber cannot be characterized by
    this method due to high dispersion, attenuation
    of sound wave and non-linear elastic properties.
    Porosity and other internal defects can affect
    the measurement.
  • The essence of the ultrasound technique is to
    determine the longitudinal and shear wave
    velocity of sound in the material (symbols vl
    vs). Y and Poissons ratio (?) can be
    determined using the formulae as below.

Note again that it is not a good idea to
calculate Youngs modulus for s-e plot
Peak Stress 193.0 MPa
Peak Load 5.83 kN
  • ? ? density

17
Funda Check
What is meant by anisotropy?
  • Anisotropy implies direction dependence of a
    given property. An isotropic material has the
    same value of a property along all directions.
  • Neumanns principle states that symmetry of a
    property will be equal to or greater than the
    point group symmetry of the crystal. Cubic
    crystals (with 4/m ?3 2/m) symmetry are isotropic
    with respect to optical properties.
  • Amorphous materials are isotropic.
    Polycrystalline materials with random orientation
    of grains are also isotropic. When such a
    polycrystalline material is plastically deformed,
    e.g. by rolling, the material develops
    crystallographic texture (preferential
    orientation of the grains) and this can lead to
    anisotropy.
  • Two important origins of anisotropy are (i)
    crystalline, (ii) geometry of sample (shape).
  • Couple of effects of crystalline anisotropy (i)
    if an electric field is applied along a
    direction, the current may flow along a different
    direction (ii) if a body is pulled, it may shear
    in addition to being elongated.

18
Material dependent
Elastic modulus
Property
Geometry dependent
Stiffness
Elastic modulus in design
  • In many applications the elastic properties of
    the material is the main one to be considered.
    However, other factors and properties should also
    be taken into account.
  • More than the modulus, it is the stiffness, which
    comes into focus as a design parameter.
  • Stiffness (as we have noted) of a structure is
    its ability to resist elastic deformation
    (deflection) on loading ? depends on the geometry
    of the component. Spring steel (e.g. high carbon
    steel with Si, Mn Cr) will be characterized by
    its elastic modulus. In the form of the coil the
    spring (a structure with a certain geometry)
    shows more elongation for the same load and
    stiffness is the relevant property of the spring
    in design.
  • In many applications high modulus in conjunction
    with good ductility should be chosen (good
    ductility avoids catastrophic failure in case of
    accidental overloading)
  • Covalently bonded materials (e.g. diamond has a
    high E (1140 GPa)) in spite of their high modulus
    are rarely used in engineering applications as
    they are brittle (poor tolerance to cracks- for
    more on this refer to chapter on fracture). Ionic
    solids are also very brittle.

Ionic solids ? NaCl MgO Al2O3 TiC Silica glass
Youngs Modulus (GN / m2) 37 310 402 308 70
19
  • METALS
  • Metals are used in multiple engineering
    applications due to a combination of properties
    they possess (i) reasonable elastic modulus,
    (ii) good ductility, (iii) ability to be alloyed
    to give good combination of properties, (iv)
    amenable to many types of fabrication techniques
    (casting, forging, extrusion, etc.), (v) good
    electrical and thermal conductivity, etc. The
    main issue with metals is often many of them have
    poor oxidation and corrosion resistance and not
    so good tolerance to high temperatures.
  • Metals of the First transition series posses a
    good combination of ductility modulus (200
    GPa). Second third transition series have an
    even higher modulus, but their higher density is
    a shortcoming.
  • POLYMERS
  • Polymers are light weight and have become
    universal. However, they have a low modulus
    dependent and cannot withstand high temperatures.
    They have a poor wear resistance as well.
  • The nature of secondary bonds (Van der Walls /
    hydrogen) is responsible for their low modulus.
    Further aspects which determine the modulus of
    polymers are (i) presence of bulky side groups,
    (ii) branching in the chains ? Unbranched
    polyethylene E 0.2 GPa, ? Polystyrene
    with large phenyl side group E 3 GPa, ?
    3D network polymer phenol formaldehyde E 3-5
    GPa(iii) Extent of cross-linking (more
    cross-linking give rise to higher stiffness).

20
Increasing the modulus of a material
  • The modulus of a metal can be increased by
    suitable alloying.
  • E is a structure (microstructure) insensitive
    property and this implies that grain size,
    dislocation density, etc. do not play an
    important role in determining the elastic modulus
    of a material.
  • One of the important strategies to increase the
    modulus of a material is by forming a
    hyrbrid/composite with an elastically harder
    (stiffer) material. E.g. TiB2 is added to Fe to
    increase the modulus of Fe.
  • COMPOSITES
  • A hard second phase (termed as reinforcement) can
    be added to a low E material to increase the
    modulus of the base material. The second phase
    can be in the form of particles, fibres,
    laminates, etc.
  • Typically the second phase though harder is
    brittle and the ductility is provided by the
    matrix. If the reinforcement cracks the
    propagation of the crack is arrested by the
    matrix.

Particulate composite
Aligned fiber composite
Laminate composite
Hybrids are designed to improve certain
properties of monolithic materials
Click here to know more about hybrids
21
Youngs modulus of a composite
  • The Youngs modulus of the composite is between
    that of the matrix and the reinforcement.
  • Let us consider two extreme cases.(A) Isostrain
    ? the matrix and the reinforcement (say long
    fibres) are under identical strain. This is
    known as Voigt averaging. (B) Isostress ? the
    matrix and fibre are under identical stress. This
    is known as Reuss averaging.
  • Let the composite be loaded in uniaxial tension
    and the volume fraction of the fibre be Vf
    (automatically the volume fraction of the matrix
    is Vm (1? Vf)).

Isostrain
Voigt averaging
This is like resistances in series
These formulae are derived later
Isostress
This is like resistances in parallel
Reuss averaging
22
  • The modulus of a real composite will lie between
    these two extremes (usually closer to isostrain).
    The modulus of the composite will depend on the
    shape of the reinforcement and the nature of the
    interface (e.g. in a long aligned fibre composite
    having a perfectly bonded interface with no
    slippage will lead to isostrain conditions.
  • Purely from a modulus perspective, a larger
    volume fraction will give a higher modulus
    however, ductility and other considerations
    typically limit the volume fraction of
    reinforcement in a composite to about 30.

Voigt averaging
  • Under iso-strain conditions ?m ?f ?c
  • I.e. resistances in series configuration
  • Under iso-stress conditions ?m ?f ?c
  • I.e. resistances in parallel configuration
  • Usually not found in practice

Reuss averaging
Yf
Isostrain
Yc ?
Isostress
For a given fiber fraction f, the modulii of
various conceivable composites lie between an
upper bound given by isostrain conditionand a
lower bound given by isostress condition
Ym
Volume fraction ?
Vf
A
B
23
Derivation of formulae
Isostrain
F
Isostress
Af
Am
L
A
F
24
Elasticity of Single Crystals and Anisotropy
  • For small stress, strain is proportional
    (linearly varies with) strain ? Hookes law.
  • The proportionality constants are 4th order
    (rank) tensors. The stiffness tensor is Eijkl or
    Cijkl. The compliance tensor is denoted as Sijkl.
  • Number of components of Eijkl Cijkl (or Sijkl)
  • in most general case (in practice the number of
    components reduces considerably)
  • 2D 2?2?2?2 16, (i 1,2)
  • 3D 3?3?3?3 81, (i 1,2,3)

Tensor form
Hookes law
Usage-1 In short Usage-2 Dimensions
S (or s) Elastic Compliance constant (Elastic) Compliance Elastic Modulus (N/m2)?1 stress?1
C (or c) Y, E Elastic Stiffness constant (Elastic) Stiffness Elastic Constant (Youngs modulus) (N/m2) stress
Youngs modulus is an elastic constant and not
an elastic modulus!
25
What does the existence of these Cijkl components
physically mean?
  • If we apply just one component of stress (say
    ?11), this in general will produce not only ?11
    but also other components of strain (which other
    components will depend on symmetry of the
    crystal- which we shall consider shortly). A
    glimpse of this we have already seen (in the
    topic on understanding stress and strain)? if we
    pull a cylinder along y-direction, it will
    contract along the x-direction ? ?11 exists
    (apart from elongation in the y-direction ?22).
  • But, this may not be the only other strain
    produced.

2D
3D
  • This implies that the body may shear also (?12
    ?21 exists). This occurs due to anisotropy in
    the crystal.
  • So (in general) a bar ? might shear if pulled
    (in addition to elongating)? may twist if bent
    (in addition to bending)? may bend if twisted
    (in addition to twisting).

26
  • We saw that a single stress component ?11 may be
    related to many strains.
  • Similarly, many stress components may give rise
    to a single strain (?11).

2D
3D
There are 4 such equations (for each component
?ij)
There are 9 such equations
27
No of independent components of Cijkl and Sijkl
  • The total number of expected components are 2D
    2?2?2?2 16, (i 1,2) 3D 3?3?3?3 81 , (i
    1,2,3). But, not all of these are independent.
  • ? Cijkl Cijlk (also, Sijkl Sijlk) ? Cijkl
    Cjikl (also, Sijkl Sjikl)? only 36 of the 81
    components are independent (for even the most
    general crystal).
  • From energy arguments it can further be seen
    that Cijkl Cklij (also, Sijkl Sklij) ? of
    the 36 components only 21 survive (even for the
    crystal of the lowest symmetry? i.e. triclinic
    crystal).
  • Given that crystals can have higher symmetry than
    the triclinic crystal, the number of independent
    components of Cijkl (or Sijkl) may be
    significantly reduced.
  • All cubic crystals (irrespective of their point
    group symmetry) have only 3 independent
    components of Cijkl (or Sijkl)? these are C1111,
    C1122, C2323.
  • This is further reduced in the case of isotropic
    materials to 2 independent constants (C1111,
    C1122). Usually, these independent constants are
    written as E ?.
  • Hence, for second rank tensor properties (like
    magnetic susceptibility, ?ij) cubic crystals are
    isotropic but, not for forth rank tensor
    properties like Elastic Stiffness.

The reasoning is postponed for later.
28
  • The magnitude of anisotropy in cubic crystals is
    quantified using the Zener anisotropy factor (A)
    as defined in the equation below.
  • A value of A of one (1) implies that the
    crystal is isotropic.

? 1011 N/m2 ? 1011 N/m2 ? 1011 N/m2
Structure C11 C12 C44 A
BCC Li 0.135 0.114 0.088 8.4
Na 0.074 0.062 0.042 7.2
K 0.037 0.031 0.019 607
DC C 10.20 2.50 4.92 1.3
Si 1.66 0.64 0.80 1.6
Ge 1.30 0.49 0.67 1.7
NaCl type NaCl 0.485 0.125 0.127 0.7
KCl 0.405 0.066 0.063 0.37
RbCl 0.363 0.062 0.047 0.31
A gt 1 ? lt111gt direction stiffest
Zener Anisotropy factory (A)
A lt 1 ? lt100gt direction stiffest
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