Unit 2 Ch.6,7,8
Percent elongation
((Final length)-(original(gauge) length)/original (gauge) length
Shear modulus
(G) the slope of the linear region of the shear stress-strain curve
Yield point
(Yield strength) the value of stress of which there is significant/noticeable strain w/o any increase in stress
Modulus of elasticity
(Young's modulus) is a measure of the stiffness of a metal which is determined by the straight line portion of the stress vs strain curve/diagram
Design properties of metals
-strength -stiffness -ductility -toughness -hardness
6 types of stress
1) tension 2) compression 3) bearing 4) flexural/bending 5) shear 6) torsional
Grain size reduction, solid solution alloying, strain hardening
3 mechanisms to make metals harder by restricting dislocation motion
File
A ____________ is a good way to tell a metals hardness (HR_c 55-65)
Cold working
A form of strain hardening in which the temperature at which deformation takes place is "cold" relative to the absolute melting temperature of the metal.
Highly ductile
A high percent elongation indicates a _________________ metal
Toughness
A measure of the energy absorbed during the fracture of a material
Brittle
A metal thwart experiences very little to no plastic deformation upon fracture
Strain hardening
A phenomenon by which a ductile metal becomes harder and stronger as it is plastically deformed
Temperature
A significant variable to a metals toughness is ______________.
Torsion
A variation of shear stress on which a structural member is twisted
Strain hardening
AKA cold working(cold rolled) or work hardening
Grain growth
After recrystallization is complete, the strain-free grains will continue to grow if the metal specimen is left at the elevated temperature
Solid solution alloying
Alloying of metals with impurity atoms (substitutional or interstitial)
Modulus of elasticity
Also known as Young's modulus. Is is = stress/strain which is a version of hookes law
Safe stress
Also known as working stress is used instead of design stress and is based on the yield strength of the material and is defined as the yield strength divided by the factor of safety
Working stress
Another name for safe stress which is based on the yield strength of the material and is defined as the yield strength divided by a factor of safety
Fracture toughness
Another name for toughness which is indicative of a materials resistance to fracture when a crack is present
Plastic deformation
As materials are deformed past elastic deformation, the stress is no longer proportional to strain, and this permanent, nonrecoverable deformation occurs.
Decreases
As temperature ____________ so does the materials ability to be tough.
Modulus of resilience
Associated with resilience, it is the strain energy per unit volume required to stress a material from an unloaded state u to the point of yielding
Plastic deformation
Atomic slip --> dislocation sliding --> slip system
Grain size
Can be regulated/controlled(manageable) by the rate of solidification I) grain size reduction
Annealing process
Cold worked materials can be "altered" restored back to pre-cw conditions through the __________________.
True stress
Defined as the load F divided by the instantaneous cross sectional area Ai, over which deformation is occurring
Poisson's ratio
Defined as the ratio of lateral and axial strains; v=-Ex/Ez= -Ey/Ez. For virtually all structural materials, Ex and Ez will be opposite signs. Theoretically For isotopic materials this ratio will be 1/4, furthermore the maximum value is .5
Elastic deformation
Deformation in which stress and strain are proportional. A plot of stress (ordinate) and strain (abscissa) results in a linear relationship.
Resolved shear stress
Dependence on applied stress and orientation of stress direction relative to slip plane normal and slip direction
Ductility
Do NOT over cold work a material or you will lose all ______________.
Tougher
Ductile metals are normally __________than brittle ones
Percent elongation
Ductility is characterised by and can be quantitatively expressed as ______________.
Axial elongation
Ductility is defined by __________________ or known as percent elongation
Tensile
Ductility represents ____________stresses
Anelastic
Elastic deformation that is dependent on time
True strain
Equal to the natural logarithm of the ratio of instantaneous and original specimen lengths
Fatigue
Failure under applied cyclic stress
Slip
For crystalline solids, deformation is accomplished by this process which involves the motion of dislocations
Proportional limit
For metals that experience this gradual elastic-plastic transition, this point of yielding may be determined as the initial departure from linearity of the stress strain curve; this is sometimes called the ______________.
Engineering strain
Force/cross-sectional area; force is applied perpendicular to the specimen in newtons or pound force and the cross-sectional area is the area where the load is applied
Ductile
Hot rolled is much more ___________ than cold rolled
Soft, hard, hardest
In an example of the classification of hardness of a metal Ex. 35HR_c the c could be represented by a, b, or c in which the a = _________, the b = ___________, and the c = ____________.
Anelasticity
In most engineering materials, there will exist a time-dependent elastic strain component--that is, elastic deformation will continue after the stress application, upon load release, some finite time is required for complete recovery. This time dependent elastic behaviour is known as this
Grain size
Influences mechanical properties I) grain size reduction
Strain
Involves physical measurable deformation, sometimes referred to as unit deformation, Only can happen under stress
Recrystallization
Is the formation of a new set of strain free and equiaxed grains that have low dislocation densities and are characteristic of the pre cold-worked condition
Elastically anisotropic
Many materials are ______________; that is, the elastic behaviour (I.e., the magnitude of E) varies with crystallographic direction
>5%
Metals are considered highly ductile when their percent elongation is ___________.
3 design lab test factors
Nature of the applied load (tension, compression, shear), load duration, and environmental conditions
Recrystallization
New grains start to grow and as a result their dislocation density decreases (strain free - equiaxed grains)
Tension
One of the most common strain-stress tests is performed in this way
Plastic deformation
Permanent deformation (requires ductility)
Recovery stage
Results is removal of residual/internal stresses and the formation of low energy dislocation configurations
Elastic deformation
Reversible deformation (hookes law)
Tensile strength
Taken as the stress level at the maximum point on the engineering stress-strain curve
Solid solution strengthening
Technique used to harden and strengthen metals is allowing with impurity atoms that go in to either substitutional or interstitial solid solutions.
Stiffness, strength, hardness, ductility, toughness
The 5 key mechanical design properties
Modulus of elasticity
The __________________ is a measure of the stiffness of a material and is a function of the slope of the straight line portion of the stress-strain curve , per hookes law
Notch toughness
The ability of a material to absorb energy and plastically deform before fracturing
Toughness
The ability of a metal to deform plastically and to absorb energy in the process before fracture
Resilience
The capacity of a material to absorb energy when it is deformed elastic ally and then, upon loading, to have the energy recovered.
Mechanical properties
The characteristics that distinguish and identify a material
Slip system
The combination of the slip plane and the slip direction.
Ductility
The degree to which a metal will plastically deform by the time of actual fracture. The ability of metals to be deformed by working processes and to retain strength and freedom from cracks when the shape is altered
Engineering stress
The difference in length of original and instantaneous divided by the original length. The change in length is sometimes referred to as deformation elongation.
Recovery stage, recrystallization
The first stage of the annealing process is the _____________ and the second stage is _________________.
Tensile strength
The highest value of stress on the curve
Strength and ductility
The key to toughness is a good combination of ___________ and ______________.
Hardness
The measure of a materials resilience to localise plastic deformation.
Ductility
The measure of the degree of plastic deformation that has been sustained at fracture.
Ductility
The measure of the degree to which a material plastically deforms by the time fracture occurs
Rockwell hardness test
The most common test for hardness
Percent elongation
The percentage of plastic strain at fracture
Yielding
The phenomenon of __________ occurs at the onset of plastic?permanent deformation
Stiffness
The property that enables a metal to withstand high stress without great strain; also known as the resistance to any sort of deformation
Hardness
The resistance of a metal to "localize plastic deformation" (from indentation, scratching, cutting). It shows metals resistance to "wear" and is a tensile strength indicator
Tensile strength
The stress at the maximum on the engineering stress-strain curve. This corresponds to the maximum stress that can be sustained by the structure in tension; if this stress is applied and maintained, fracture will result.
Yield strength
The stress corresponding to the intersection of the linear elastic section and the plastic deformation curve
Yielding
The stress level at which plastic deformation begins.
Recrystallization temperature
The temperature at which recrystallization just reaches completion in 1 hour.
Rockwell and Brinell tests
The two most common hardness testing techniques
Elastic limit
The value of stress at which the metal has deformed plastically
Proportional limit
The value of stress where the curve first deviates from a straight line
Recovery
There is some relief of internal strain energy by dislocation motion. Dislocation density decreases, and dislocations assume low-energy configurations. Some material properties revert back to their pre cold-worked values.
Hardness tests
These are performed because the are simple and inexpensive, nondestructive, and mechanical properties often may be estimated
Tension, compression, shear
Three principle way in which a load may be applied
Anelasticity
Time needed to complete strain recovery
Strain hardening
When a normally ductile metal becomes harder and stronger as a result of plastic deformation. -metals can be expressed in terms of their "% cold worked"
Increasing temperature
With ___________________, values of elastic modulus and tensile and yield strengths decrease, whereas the ductility increases
Grain boundaries
_____________ act as barriers/impediments to dislocation motion I) grain size reduction
Cold rolled
_____________ has a much better surface finish than hot rolled
Hardness tests
______________ are used more frequently than any other mechanical test
Restricting
_________________ dislocation motion renders a metal harder or stronger
Hardness and strength
___________________ are related to the level of plastic deformation to occur. Hard it is the harder it is to deform (dislocations to move past one another).
Grain size
____________in metals can be regulated by its rate of solidification.
Toughness
is indicative of a materials resistance to fracture when a crack is present.