Chapter 7
How do we measure mechanical responses of brittle materials
Bend testing
Why is stress at fracture lower than tensile strength?
Necking - the material no longer has the initial cross-sectional area
Yield Stress
The stress at which a material begins to deform plastically, and where the graph deviates from linear elastic regime (aka yield strength) Where we measure strength of a material
Torsion
Twisting in a plane Related to shear - kind of gradient shear in a circular, twisting pattern
What is the Poisson ratio of most materials and what does it imply
0.25 < v < 0.35 (particularly metals) Implies that most materials are not isotropic and do not conserve volume
Poisson ratio in isotropic material
0.25 because response is same in every direction Positive ratio means x,y shrinks when z increases
Poisson ratio when volume is conserved in a material
0.5 (maximum possible value)
How do you describe the load on a material?
1) Stress on the material 2) Orientation of the load Ex. for uniaxial tension is a load perpendicular to a plane
What factors influence how we observe polymers?
1. Water is small enough to fit inside (between chains) of most polymer materials which changes mechanical behavior 2. Arrangement of chains matters! (amorphous vs crystalline)
Shear loading
A load parallel to a plane Load is in the surface and opposite force is applied on opposite side of material in order to maintain mechanical equilibrium
Rockwell Hardness
A method of determining hardness of a metal by applying pressure on the surface of metal being tested. A small diamond pyramid or tungsten ball is forced against the surface (10 kg load usually) for minor load, then a major load applied for a fixed time at fixed rate (60, 100, 150kg). The hardness value number is the depth of penetration
3 classes of polymer mechanical responses
A-Brittle polymer (no evidence of any kind of yield, just a linear elastic region and then fracture) B-Elastomer polymer* (most common and most characteristic stress strain curve, traditional linear elastic regime, then plastic deformation before fracture) C-Elastomer polymer (linear elastic regime dominates)
Ductile
Allows a lot of plastic deformation before fracture
ASTM
American Society Testing and Materials - Lays out how to describe and measure mechanical properties
What happens to the chains in polymers during necking?
Amorphous chains untangle and align with each other to form new crystalline regions, allowing the material to elongate
Viscous (flow)
Anelastic (time-dependent) plastic deformation
Situations where plastic deformation does not occur
Brittle material, ceramics, covalent bonds (due to directionality), ionic bonds (looking for cations or anions specifically)
Glassy
Brittle/stiff - expect cross-linked or networked polymers For non-polymers, this implies non crystalline
Brittle polymer makeup
Crosslinked/networked - covalent bonds start to stretch a little then the whole thing comes apart
What is the shape/cut of material used for tensile testing called?
Dog-bone
0.2% Strain offset method
Draw a line parallel to linear elastic regime from 0.2% strain and point it intersects on stress strain curve is yield Used for finding yield stress for a gradual transition from elastic to plastic deformation
Materials Properties
E - Elastic modulus v - Poisson ratio G - shear modulus All specific to unique materials and for linear elastic response should stay the same so long as composition stays the same, ie., processing doesn't matter
Hardness testing benefits
Fast, cheap, easy, non-destructive since load and response is localized
Relaxation modulus
For viscoelastic polymers, the time-dependent modulus of elasticity. It is determined from stress relaxation measurements as the ratio of stress (taken at some time after the load application—normally 10 s) to strain Measuring how material responds to strain over time
How is plastic deformation temperature dependent?
Higher temperature makes plastic deformation easier
Poisson Effect
If length of a material increases when stretched, cross-sectional area should decrease
Fracture toughness
Integral from 0 to strain at fracture of sigma d epsilon How much energy a material can absorb before it breaks
Tensile testing
It determines the failure of ductile materials in tension or compression below the elastic limit
Shear Modulus
Linear elastic limit for shear stress where shear stress (tao) is equal to shear modulus (G) times shear strain (gamma) The ratio of shear stress to strain
Rubbery
Lots of elastic or plastic deformation
Brittle
Material that has no plastic deformation meaning that fracture toughness is low
Isotropic material
Material that has the same response/properties in all directions
Tensile strength
Maximum stress that can be applied to a material (maximum on plastic deformation curve) Inevitably leads to fracture
Stress for flexural loading
Mc/I where Mc is the bending moment, c is distance from center of specimen, and I is moment of inertia of cross-section
What kind of deformation of the dog bone happens beyond ultimate tensile strength?
Necking
What is the scale of hardness
No absolute scale, just saying "something is harder than something else Mohs scale: talc is 1 (softest) to diamond as 10 (hardest)
Elastomer polymer makeup
No/few crosslinks, amorphous, giving lots of room to move around and recover
Engineering Strain
Normalized deformation (change in size/shape) Epsilon = delta(l)/l_0 l_0 = initial length Only for tensile loading
Engineering Stress
Normalized load (sigma = F/A_0) A_0 = initial cross-sectional area Can be applied to tensile or shear load
What is the elastic modulus?
Numerical value characterizing response to a load in the elastic limit Elastic response (initial linear response) of a material to applied stress/strain Slope of stress/strain curve
Why do we not measure strength of a material by its tensile strength?
Once a material reaches tensile strength, enough plastic deformation has occurred that fracture is inevitable and the material is useless for its purpose
Uniaxial compression
Opposite of uniaxial tension - pushing material together along one axis
What factors change polymer mechanical properties?
Past processing and current conditions
Fracture
Physical separation of a part
Why are polymers/soft materials so hard to test?
Range of bond types: secondary (van der Waals) bonds between chains, primary bonds (cross links) sometimes between chains, and primary bonds (covalent bonds!) along C-chain
Poisson Ratio
Reaction perpendicular to applied load
Hardness
Resistance to localized deformation (scratching, gouging)
Viscoelastic creep
Resistance to stress and strain as a function of time but now applied a fixed load (stress) and watch material stretch out Most commonly observed in metals but also present in polymers
Mechanical properties
Response of materials to applied loads Depends on both details of load and details about material
Plastic polymer makeup
Semicrystalline/crystallizable with some cross links
In what orientations does tensile load resolve into within uniaxial tension?
Shear and tensile load components (sigma prime and tao prime), one parallel and one perpendicular to the plane
Load displacement curve
Similar to stress strain curve but length continues to increase as force is applied until fracture True stress looks the same since it is over instantaneous area and the ratio keeps increasing
Viscoelasticity
Simplest form of anelasticity, time-dependent elastic response When anelasticity is significant in a material (Think a ball of taffy slowly spreading out on a counter)
Uniaxial tension
Simplest load - tension applied along one axes (pulling material apart)
What is the response of material to a load?
Simplest response: elastic deformation (bonds stretching, where stress is equal to Young's Modulus times Hooke's Law of linear elasticity) Slope of stress strain graph is young's modulus
How to determine Young's Modulus given a stress/strain graph with a linear elastic response
Slope of the stress strain graph
Percent Elongation (%EL)
Strain at specific points
Fracture stress
Stress at fracture Usually lower than tensile strength At end of stress strain curve
How is stress and strain graphed?
Stress is dependent variable (y axis) and strain is independent variable (x axis)
Resilience
Stress times strain - area under the curve of linear elastic regime Integral from 0 to strain at yield of sigma d epsilon If force is below resilience, it won't get to yielding
Yield Point Phenomenon
Sudden onset of plastic deformation in some crazy metals - creates an upper and lower yield point Yield stress is measured at lower yield point (average value)
How to determine Young's Modulus given a stress/strain graph with a nonlinear elastic response
Take local slopes - either the slope of the secant or tangent line
Formula given for shear stress
Tao = F/A_0 Same formula as tensile stress, but clearer because of different symbols
What represents yield on a polymer stress/strain curve
The highest point on the curve
Poisson's Ratio
The negative ratio of lateral strain to the corresponding longitudinal strain in an elastic body under longitudinal stress (nu = -stress in x or y/ stress in z)
Why aren't brittle materials tensile tested?
They are hard to form into tensile specimens, hard to grip, and hard to measure strain
Anelasticity/viscoelasticity
Time dependent response to elastic deformation
Anelasticity
Time-dependent elastic (nonpermanent) deformation Most often observed in polymers and ignored in metals
Leathery
Tough but plastic deformation possible, less cross-links or higher temperature
Why is tensile testing not performed on a material of uniform thickness?`
When the cross-sectional area is the same everywhere, you can't predict where it will break because the stress is the same throughout the material. The thin part of the dog bone where A is a minimum maximizes the stress in that area, assuring most stress can be measured