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Stress-strain curve 
A stress-strain curve is a graph derived from measuring load (stress - σ) versus 
extension (strain - ε) for a sample of a material. The nature of the curve varies from 
material to material. The following diagrams illustrate the stress-strain behaviour of 
typical materials in terms of the engineering stress and engineering strain where the 
stress and strain are calculated based on the original dimensions of the sample and not 
the instantaneous values. In each case the samples are loaded in tension although in 
many cases similar behaviour is observed in compression. 
Ductile materials 
Fig 1. A stress-strain curve typical of structural steel 
1. Ultimate Strength 
2. Yield Strength 
3. Rupture 
4. Strain hardening region 
5. Necking region. 
Steel generally exhibits a very linear stress-strain relationship up to a well defined 
yield point (figure 1). The linear portion of the curve is the elastic region and the 
slope is the modulus of elasticity or Young's Modulus. After the yield point the curve 
typically decreases slightly due to dislocations escaping from Cottrell atmospheres. 
As deformation continues the stress increases due to strain hardening until it reaches 
the ultimate strength. Until this point the cross-sectional area decreases uniformly due
to Poisson contractions. However, beyond this point a neck forms where the local 
cross-sectional area decreases more quickly than the rest of the sample resulting in an 
increase in the true stress. On an engineering stress-strain curve this is seen as a 
decrease in the stress. Conversely, if the curve is plotted in terms of true stress and 
true strain the stress will continue to rise until failure. Eventually the neck becomes 
unstable and the specimen ruptures (fractures). 
Most ductile metals other than steel do not have a well-defined yield point (figure 2). 
For these materials the yield strength is typically determined by the "offset yield 
method", by which a line is drawn parallel to the linear elastic portion of the curve 
and intersecting the abscissa at some arbitrary value (most commonly .2%). The 
intersection of this line and the stress-strain curve is reported as the yield point. 
Brittle materials 
Brittle materials such as concrete or ceramics do not have a yield point. For these 
materials the rupture strength and the ultimate strength are the same. 
Properties 
The area underneath the stress-strain curve is the toughness of the material- i.e. the 
energy the material can absorb prior to rupture......... 
The resilience of the material is the triangular area underneath the elastic region of the 
curve. 
Yield (engineering) 
Yield strength, or the yield point, is defined in engineering and materials science as 
the stress at which a material begins to plastically deform. Prior to the yield point the 
material will deform elastically and will return to its original shape when the applied 
stress is removed. Once the yield point is passed some fraction of the deformation will 
be permanent and non-reversible. Knowledge of the yield point is vital when 
designing a component since it generally represents an upper limit to the load that can
be applied. It is also important for the control of many materials production 
techniques such as forging, rolling, or pressing 
In structural engineering, yield is the permanent plastic deformation of a structural 
member under stress. This is a soft failure mode which does not normally cause 
catastrophic failure unless it accelerates buckling. 
In 3D space of principal stresses (σ1,σ2,σ3), an infinite number of yield points form 
together a yield surface. 
Definition 
It is often difficult to precisely define yield due to the wide variety of stress-strain 
behaviours exhibited by real materials. In addition there are several possible ways to 
define the yield point in a given material: 
· The point at which dislocations first begin to move. Given that dislocations 
begin to move at very low stresses, and the difficulty in detecting such 
movement, this definition is rarely used. 
· Elastic Limit - The lowest stress at which permanent deformation can be 
measured. This requires a complex iteractive load-unload procedure and is 
critically dependent on the accuracy of the equipment and the skill of the 
operator. 
· Proportional Limit - The point at which the stress-strain curve becomes non-linear. 
In most metallic materials the elastic limit and proportional limit are 
essentially the same. 
· Offset Yield Point (proof stress) - Due to the lack of a clear border between 
the elastic and plastic regions in many materials, the yield point is often 
defined as the stress at some arbitrary plastic strain (typically 0.2% [1]). This 
is determined by the intersection of a line offset from the linear region by the 
required strain. In some materials there is essentially no linear region and so a 
certain value of plastic strain is defined instead. Although somewhat arbitrary 
this method does allow for a consistent comparison of materials and is the 
most common.
Yield criterion 
A yield criterion, often expressed as yield surface, is an hypothesis concerning the 
limit of elasticity under any combination of stresses. There are two interpretations of 
yield criterion: one is purely mathematical in taking a statistical approach while other 
models attempt to provide a justification based on established physical principles. 
Since stress and strain are tensor qualities they can be described on the basis of three 
principal directions, in the case of stress these are denoted by , and . 
The following represent the most common yield criterion as applied to an isotropic 
material (uniform properties in all directions). Other equations have been proposed or 
are used in specialist situations. 
Maximum Principal Stress Theory - Yield occurs when the largest principal stress 
exceeds the uniaxial tensile yield strength. Although this criterion allows for a quick 
and easy comparison with experimental data it is rarely suitable for design purposes. 
Maximum Principal Strain Theory - Yield occurs when the maximum principal 
strain reaches the strain corresponding to the yield point during a simple tensile test. 
In terms of the principal stresses this is determined by the equation: 
Maximum Shear Stress Theory - Also known as the Tresca criterion, after the 
French scientist Henri Tresca. This assumes that yield occurs when the shear stress 
exceeds the shear yield strength : 
Total Strain Energy Theory - This theory assumes that the stored energy associated 
with elastic deformation at the point of yield is independent of the specific stress 
tensor. Thus yield occurs when the strain energy per unit volume is greater than the
strain energy at the elastic limit in simple tension. For a 3-dimensional stress state this 
is given by: 
Distortion Energy Theory - This theory proposes that the total strain energy can be 
separated into two components: the volumetric (hydrostatic) strain energy and the 
shape (distortion or shear) strain energy. It is proposed that yield occurs when the 
distortion component exceeds that at the yield point for a simple tensile test. This is 
generally referred to as the Von Mises criterion and is expressed as: 
Based on a different theoretical underpinning this expression is also referred to as 
octahedral shear stress theory. 
Factors influencing yield stress 
The stress at which yield occurs is dependent on both the rate of deformation (strain 
rate) and, more significantly, the temperature at which the deformation occurs. Early 
work by Alder and Philips in 1954 found that the relationship between yield stress and 
strain rate (at constant temperature) was best described by a power law relationship of 
the form 
where C is a constant and m is the strain rate sensitivity. The latter generally increases 
with temperature, and materials where m reaches a value greater than ~0.5 tend to 
exhibit super plastic behaviour. 
Later, more complex equations were proposed that simultaneously dealt with both 
temperature and strain rate:
where α and A are constants and Z is the temperature-compensated strain-rate - often 
described by the Zener-Hollomon parameter: 
where QHW is the activation energy for hot deformation and T is the absolute 
temperature. 
Implications for structural engineering 
Yielded structures have a lower and less constant modulus of elasticity, so deflections 
increase and buckling strength decreases, and both become more difficult to predict. 
When load is removed, the structure will remain permanently bent, and may have 
residual pre-stress. If buckling is avoided, structures have a tendency to adapt a more 
efficient shape that will be better able to sustain (or avoid) the loads that bent it. 
Because of this, highly engineered structures rely on yielding as a graceful failure 
mode which allows fail-safe operation. In aerospace engineering, for example, no 
safety factor is needed when comparing limit loads (the highest loads expected during 
normal operation) to yield criteria. Safety factors are only required when comparing 
limit loads to ultimate failure criteria, (buckling or rupture.) In other words, a plane 
which undergoes extraordinary loading beyond its operational envelope may bend a 
wing slightly, but this is considered to be a fail-safe failure mode which will not 
prevent it from making an emergency landing. 
Elastic modulus 
An elastic modulus, or modulus of elasticity, is the mathematical description of an 
object or substance's tendency to be deformed elastically (i.e. non-permanently) when 
a force is applied to it. The elastic modulus of an object is defined as the slope of its 
stress-strain curve in the elastic deformation region:
where λ is the elastic modulus; stress is the force causing the deformation divided by 
the area to which the force is applied; and strain is the ratio of the change caused by 
the stress to the original state of the object. Because stress is measured in pascals and 
strain is a unitless ratio, the units of λ are therefore pascals as well. An alternative 
definition is that the elastic modulus is the stress required to cause a sample of the 
material to double in length. This is not literally true for most materials because the 
value is far greater than the yield stress of the material or the point where elongation 
becomes nonlinear but some may find this definition more intuitive. 
Specifying how stress and strain are to be measured, including directions, allows for 
many types of elastic moduli to be defined. The three primary ones are 
· Young's modulus (E) describes tensile elasticity, or the tendency of an object 
to deform along an axis when opposing forces are applied along that axis; it is 
defined as the ratio of tensile stress to tensile strain. It is often referred to 
simply as the elastic modulus. 
· The shear modulus or modulus of rigidity (G or μ) describes an object's 
tendency to shear (the deformation of shape at constant volume) when acted 
upon by opposing forces; it is defined as shear stress over shear strain. The 
shear modulus is part of the derivation of viscosity. 
· The bulk modulus (K) describes volumetric elasticity, or the tendency of an 
object's volume to deform when under pressure; it is defined as volumetric 
stress over volumetric strain, and is the inverse of compressibility. The bulk 
modulus is an extension of Young's modulus to three dimensions. 
Three other elastic moduli are Poisson's ratio, Lamé's first parameter, and P-wave 
modulus. 
Homogeneous and isotropic (similar in all directions) materials (solids) have their 
(linear) elastic properties fully described by two elastic moduli, and one may choose 
any pair. Given a pair of elastic moduli, all other elastic moduli can be calculated 
according to formulas in the table below. 
Inviscid fluids are special in that they can not support shear stress, meaning that the 
shear modulus is always zero. This also implies that Young's modulus is always zero.
Young's modulus 
In solid mechanics, Young's modulus (E) is a measure of the stiffness of a given 
material. It is also known as the Young modulus, modulus of elasticity, elastic 
modulus or tensile modulus (the bulk modulus and shear modulus are different types 
of elastic modulus). It is defined as the ratio, for small strains, of the rate of change of 
stress with strain.[1] This can be experimentally determined from the slope of a stress-strain 
curve created during tensile tests conducted on a sample of the material. 
Young's modulus is named after Thomas Young, the 18th Century British scientist. 
Units 
The SI unit of modulus of elasticity (E, or less commonly Y) is the pascal. Given the 
large values typical of many common materials, figures are usually quoted in 
megapascals or gigapascals. Some use an alternative unit form, kN/mm², which gives 
the same numeric value as gigapascals. 
The modulus of elasticity can also be measured in other units of pressure, for example 
pounds per square inch. 
Usage 
The Young's modulus allows the behavior of a material under load to be calculated. 
For instance, it can be used to predict the amount a wire will extend under tension, or 
to predict the load at which a thin column will buckle under compression. Some 
calculations also require the use of other material properties, such as the shear 
modulus, density, or Poisson's ratio. 
Linear vs non-linear 
For many materials, Young's modulus is a constant over a range of strains. Such 
materials are called linear, and are said to obey Hooke's law. Examples of linear 
materials include steel, carbon fiber, and glass. Rubber and soil (except at very low 
strains) are non-linear materials.
Directional materials 
Most metals and ceramics, along with many other materials, are isotropic - their 
mechanical properties are the same in all directions, but metals and ceramics can be 
treated to create different grain sizes and orientations. This treatment makes them 
anisotropic, meaning that Young's modulus will change depending on which direction 
the force is applied from. However, some materials, particularly those which are 
composites of two or more ingredients have a "grain" or similar mechanical structure. 
As a result, these anisotropic materials have different mechanical properties when 
load is applied in different directions. For example, carbon fiber is much stiffer 
(higher Young's modulus) when loaded parallel to the fibers (along the grain). Other 
such materials include wood and reinforced concrete. Engineers can use this 
directional phenomonon to their advantage in creating various structures in our 
environment. Concrete is commonly used to construct support columns in buildings, 
supporting huge loads under compression. However, when concrete is used in the 
construction of bridges and is in tension, it needs to be reinforced with steel which has 
a far higher value of Young's modulus in tension and compensates for concrete's low 
value in tension. Copper is an excellent conductor of electricity and is used to transmit 
electricity over long distance cables, however copper has a relatively low value for 
Young's modulus at 130GPa and it tends to stretch in tension. When the copper cable 
is bound completely in steel wire around its outside this stretching can be prevented as 
the steel (with a higher value of Young's modulus in tension) takes up the tension that 
the copper would otherwise experience. 
Calculation 
Young's modulus, E, can be calculated by dividing the tensile stress by the tensile 
strain: 
where 
E is the Young's modulus (modulus of elasticity) measured in pascals;
F is the force applied to the object; 
A0 is the original cross-sectional area through which the force is applied; 
ΔL is the amount by which the length of the object changes; 
L0 is the original length of the object. 
Force exerted by stretched or compressed material 
The Young's modulus of a material can be used to calculate the force it exerts under a 
specific strain. 
where F is the force exerted by the material when compressed or stretched by ΔL. 
From this formula can be derived Hooke's law, which describes the stiffness of an 
ideal spring: 
where 
Elastic potential energy 
The elastic potential energy stored is given by the integral of this expression with 
respect to L: 
where Ue is the elastic potential energy. 
The elastic potential energy per unit volume is given by:
, where is the strain in the material. 
This formula can also be expressed as the integral of Hooke's law: 
Approximate values 
Young's modulus can vary considerably depending on the exact composition of the 
material. For example, the value for most metals can vary by 5% or more, depending 
on the precise composition of the alloy and any heat treatment applied during 
manufacture. As such, many of the values here are approximate. 
Approximate Young's moduli of various solids 
Material 
Young's modulus 
(E) in G Pa 
Young's modulus (E) in 
lbf/in² (psi) 
Rubber (small strain) 0.01-0.1 1,500-15,000 
Low density polyethylene 0.2 30,000 
Polypropylene 1.5-2 217,000-290,000 
Bacteriophage capsids 1-3 150,000-435,000 
Polyethylene terephthalate 2-2.5 290,000-360,000 
Polystyrene 3-3.5 435,000-505,000 
Nylon 3-7 290,000-580,000 
Oak wood (along grain) 11 1,600,000 
High-strength concrete (under 
30 4,350,000 
compression) 
Magnesium metal (Mg) 45 6,500,000 
Aluminium alloy 69 10,000,000 
Glass (all types) 72 10,400,000 
Brass and bronze 103-124 17,000,000
Titanium (Ti) 105-120 15,000,000-17,500,000 
Carbon fiber reinforced plastic 
10 - 20 1,500,000 - 3,200,000 
(unidirectional, along grain) 
Wrought iron and steel 190-210 30,000,000 
Tungsten (W) 400-410 58,000,000-59,500,000 
Silicon carbide (SiC) 450 65,000,000 
Tungsten carbide (WC) 450-650 65,000,000-94,000,000 
Single carbon nanotube [1] 1,000+ 145,000,000 
Diamond (C) 1,050-1,200 150,000,000-175,000,000

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Stress strain curve

  • 1. Stress-strain curve A stress-strain curve is a graph derived from measuring load (stress - σ) versus extension (strain - ε) for a sample of a material. The nature of the curve varies from material to material. The following diagrams illustrate the stress-strain behaviour of typical materials in terms of the engineering stress and engineering strain where the stress and strain are calculated based on the original dimensions of the sample and not the instantaneous values. In each case the samples are loaded in tension although in many cases similar behaviour is observed in compression. Ductile materials Fig 1. A stress-strain curve typical of structural steel 1. Ultimate Strength 2. Yield Strength 3. Rupture 4. Strain hardening region 5. Necking region. Steel generally exhibits a very linear stress-strain relationship up to a well defined yield point (figure 1). The linear portion of the curve is the elastic region and the slope is the modulus of elasticity or Young's Modulus. After the yield point the curve typically decreases slightly due to dislocations escaping from Cottrell atmospheres. As deformation continues the stress increases due to strain hardening until it reaches the ultimate strength. Until this point the cross-sectional area decreases uniformly due
  • 2. to Poisson contractions. However, beyond this point a neck forms where the local cross-sectional area decreases more quickly than the rest of the sample resulting in an increase in the true stress. On an engineering stress-strain curve this is seen as a decrease in the stress. Conversely, if the curve is plotted in terms of true stress and true strain the stress will continue to rise until failure. Eventually the neck becomes unstable and the specimen ruptures (fractures). Most ductile metals other than steel do not have a well-defined yield point (figure 2). For these materials the yield strength is typically determined by the "offset yield method", by which a line is drawn parallel to the linear elastic portion of the curve and intersecting the abscissa at some arbitrary value (most commonly .2%). The intersection of this line and the stress-strain curve is reported as the yield point. Brittle materials Brittle materials such as concrete or ceramics do not have a yield point. For these materials the rupture strength and the ultimate strength are the same. Properties The area underneath the stress-strain curve is the toughness of the material- i.e. the energy the material can absorb prior to rupture......... The resilience of the material is the triangular area underneath the elastic region of the curve. Yield (engineering) Yield strength, or the yield point, is defined in engineering and materials science as the stress at which a material begins to plastically deform. Prior to the yield point the material will deform elastically and will return to its original shape when the applied stress is removed. Once the yield point is passed some fraction of the deformation will be permanent and non-reversible. Knowledge of the yield point is vital when designing a component since it generally represents an upper limit to the load that can
  • 3. be applied. It is also important for the control of many materials production techniques such as forging, rolling, or pressing In structural engineering, yield is the permanent plastic deformation of a structural member under stress. This is a soft failure mode which does not normally cause catastrophic failure unless it accelerates buckling. In 3D space of principal stresses (σ1,σ2,σ3), an infinite number of yield points form together a yield surface. Definition It is often difficult to precisely define yield due to the wide variety of stress-strain behaviours exhibited by real materials. In addition there are several possible ways to define the yield point in a given material: · The point at which dislocations first begin to move. Given that dislocations begin to move at very low stresses, and the difficulty in detecting such movement, this definition is rarely used. · Elastic Limit - The lowest stress at which permanent deformation can be measured. This requires a complex iteractive load-unload procedure and is critically dependent on the accuracy of the equipment and the skill of the operator. · Proportional Limit - The point at which the stress-strain curve becomes non-linear. In most metallic materials the elastic limit and proportional limit are essentially the same. · Offset Yield Point (proof stress) - Due to the lack of a clear border between the elastic and plastic regions in many materials, the yield point is often defined as the stress at some arbitrary plastic strain (typically 0.2% [1]). This is determined by the intersection of a line offset from the linear region by the required strain. In some materials there is essentially no linear region and so a certain value of plastic strain is defined instead. Although somewhat arbitrary this method does allow for a consistent comparison of materials and is the most common.
  • 4. Yield criterion A yield criterion, often expressed as yield surface, is an hypothesis concerning the limit of elasticity under any combination of stresses. There are two interpretations of yield criterion: one is purely mathematical in taking a statistical approach while other models attempt to provide a justification based on established physical principles. Since stress and strain are tensor qualities they can be described on the basis of three principal directions, in the case of stress these are denoted by , and . The following represent the most common yield criterion as applied to an isotropic material (uniform properties in all directions). Other equations have been proposed or are used in specialist situations. Maximum Principal Stress Theory - Yield occurs when the largest principal stress exceeds the uniaxial tensile yield strength. Although this criterion allows for a quick and easy comparison with experimental data it is rarely suitable for design purposes. Maximum Principal Strain Theory - Yield occurs when the maximum principal strain reaches the strain corresponding to the yield point during a simple tensile test. In terms of the principal stresses this is determined by the equation: Maximum Shear Stress Theory - Also known as the Tresca criterion, after the French scientist Henri Tresca. This assumes that yield occurs when the shear stress exceeds the shear yield strength : Total Strain Energy Theory - This theory assumes that the stored energy associated with elastic deformation at the point of yield is independent of the specific stress tensor. Thus yield occurs when the strain energy per unit volume is greater than the
  • 5. strain energy at the elastic limit in simple tension. For a 3-dimensional stress state this is given by: Distortion Energy Theory - This theory proposes that the total strain energy can be separated into two components: the volumetric (hydrostatic) strain energy and the shape (distortion or shear) strain energy. It is proposed that yield occurs when the distortion component exceeds that at the yield point for a simple tensile test. This is generally referred to as the Von Mises criterion and is expressed as: Based on a different theoretical underpinning this expression is also referred to as octahedral shear stress theory. Factors influencing yield stress The stress at which yield occurs is dependent on both the rate of deformation (strain rate) and, more significantly, the temperature at which the deformation occurs. Early work by Alder and Philips in 1954 found that the relationship between yield stress and strain rate (at constant temperature) was best described by a power law relationship of the form where C is a constant and m is the strain rate sensitivity. The latter generally increases with temperature, and materials where m reaches a value greater than ~0.5 tend to exhibit super plastic behaviour. Later, more complex equations were proposed that simultaneously dealt with both temperature and strain rate:
  • 6. where α and A are constants and Z is the temperature-compensated strain-rate - often described by the Zener-Hollomon parameter: where QHW is the activation energy for hot deformation and T is the absolute temperature. Implications for structural engineering Yielded structures have a lower and less constant modulus of elasticity, so deflections increase and buckling strength decreases, and both become more difficult to predict. When load is removed, the structure will remain permanently bent, and may have residual pre-stress. If buckling is avoided, structures have a tendency to adapt a more efficient shape that will be better able to sustain (or avoid) the loads that bent it. Because of this, highly engineered structures rely on yielding as a graceful failure mode which allows fail-safe operation. In aerospace engineering, for example, no safety factor is needed when comparing limit loads (the highest loads expected during normal operation) to yield criteria. Safety factors are only required when comparing limit loads to ultimate failure criteria, (buckling or rupture.) In other words, a plane which undergoes extraordinary loading beyond its operational envelope may bend a wing slightly, but this is considered to be a fail-safe failure mode which will not prevent it from making an emergency landing. Elastic modulus An elastic modulus, or modulus of elasticity, is the mathematical description of an object or substance's tendency to be deformed elastically (i.e. non-permanently) when a force is applied to it. The elastic modulus of an object is defined as the slope of its stress-strain curve in the elastic deformation region:
  • 7. where λ is the elastic modulus; stress is the force causing the deformation divided by the area to which the force is applied; and strain is the ratio of the change caused by the stress to the original state of the object. Because stress is measured in pascals and strain is a unitless ratio, the units of λ are therefore pascals as well. An alternative definition is that the elastic modulus is the stress required to cause a sample of the material to double in length. This is not literally true for most materials because the value is far greater than the yield stress of the material or the point where elongation becomes nonlinear but some may find this definition more intuitive. Specifying how stress and strain are to be measured, including directions, allows for many types of elastic moduli to be defined. The three primary ones are · Young's modulus (E) describes tensile elasticity, or the tendency of an object to deform along an axis when opposing forces are applied along that axis; it is defined as the ratio of tensile stress to tensile strain. It is often referred to simply as the elastic modulus. · The shear modulus or modulus of rigidity (G or μ) describes an object's tendency to shear (the deformation of shape at constant volume) when acted upon by opposing forces; it is defined as shear stress over shear strain. The shear modulus is part of the derivation of viscosity. · The bulk modulus (K) describes volumetric elasticity, or the tendency of an object's volume to deform when under pressure; it is defined as volumetric stress over volumetric strain, and is the inverse of compressibility. The bulk modulus is an extension of Young's modulus to three dimensions. Three other elastic moduli are Poisson's ratio, Lamé's first parameter, and P-wave modulus. Homogeneous and isotropic (similar in all directions) materials (solids) have their (linear) elastic properties fully described by two elastic moduli, and one may choose any pair. Given a pair of elastic moduli, all other elastic moduli can be calculated according to formulas in the table below. Inviscid fluids are special in that they can not support shear stress, meaning that the shear modulus is always zero. This also implies that Young's modulus is always zero.
  • 8. Young's modulus In solid mechanics, Young's modulus (E) is a measure of the stiffness of a given material. It is also known as the Young modulus, modulus of elasticity, elastic modulus or tensile modulus (the bulk modulus and shear modulus are different types of elastic modulus). It is defined as the ratio, for small strains, of the rate of change of stress with strain.[1] This can be experimentally determined from the slope of a stress-strain curve created during tensile tests conducted on a sample of the material. Young's modulus is named after Thomas Young, the 18th Century British scientist. Units The SI unit of modulus of elasticity (E, or less commonly Y) is the pascal. Given the large values typical of many common materials, figures are usually quoted in megapascals or gigapascals. Some use an alternative unit form, kN/mm², which gives the same numeric value as gigapascals. The modulus of elasticity can also be measured in other units of pressure, for example pounds per square inch. Usage The Young's modulus allows the behavior of a material under load to be calculated. For instance, it can be used to predict the amount a wire will extend under tension, or to predict the load at which a thin column will buckle under compression. Some calculations also require the use of other material properties, such as the shear modulus, density, or Poisson's ratio. Linear vs non-linear For many materials, Young's modulus is a constant over a range of strains. Such materials are called linear, and are said to obey Hooke's law. Examples of linear materials include steel, carbon fiber, and glass. Rubber and soil (except at very low strains) are non-linear materials.
  • 9. Directional materials Most metals and ceramics, along with many other materials, are isotropic - their mechanical properties are the same in all directions, but metals and ceramics can be treated to create different grain sizes and orientations. This treatment makes them anisotropic, meaning that Young's modulus will change depending on which direction the force is applied from. However, some materials, particularly those which are composites of two or more ingredients have a "grain" or similar mechanical structure. As a result, these anisotropic materials have different mechanical properties when load is applied in different directions. For example, carbon fiber is much stiffer (higher Young's modulus) when loaded parallel to the fibers (along the grain). Other such materials include wood and reinforced concrete. Engineers can use this directional phenomonon to their advantage in creating various structures in our environment. Concrete is commonly used to construct support columns in buildings, supporting huge loads under compression. However, when concrete is used in the construction of bridges and is in tension, it needs to be reinforced with steel which has a far higher value of Young's modulus in tension and compensates for concrete's low value in tension. Copper is an excellent conductor of electricity and is used to transmit electricity over long distance cables, however copper has a relatively low value for Young's modulus at 130GPa and it tends to stretch in tension. When the copper cable is bound completely in steel wire around its outside this stretching can be prevented as the steel (with a higher value of Young's modulus in tension) takes up the tension that the copper would otherwise experience. Calculation Young's modulus, E, can be calculated by dividing the tensile stress by the tensile strain: where E is the Young's modulus (modulus of elasticity) measured in pascals;
  • 10. F is the force applied to the object; A0 is the original cross-sectional area through which the force is applied; ΔL is the amount by which the length of the object changes; L0 is the original length of the object. Force exerted by stretched or compressed material The Young's modulus of a material can be used to calculate the force it exerts under a specific strain. where F is the force exerted by the material when compressed or stretched by ΔL. From this formula can be derived Hooke's law, which describes the stiffness of an ideal spring: where Elastic potential energy The elastic potential energy stored is given by the integral of this expression with respect to L: where Ue is the elastic potential energy. The elastic potential energy per unit volume is given by:
  • 11. , where is the strain in the material. This formula can also be expressed as the integral of Hooke's law: Approximate values Young's modulus can vary considerably depending on the exact composition of the material. For example, the value for most metals can vary by 5% or more, depending on the precise composition of the alloy and any heat treatment applied during manufacture. As such, many of the values here are approximate. Approximate Young's moduli of various solids Material Young's modulus (E) in G Pa Young's modulus (E) in lbf/in² (psi) Rubber (small strain) 0.01-0.1 1,500-15,000 Low density polyethylene 0.2 30,000 Polypropylene 1.5-2 217,000-290,000 Bacteriophage capsids 1-3 150,000-435,000 Polyethylene terephthalate 2-2.5 290,000-360,000 Polystyrene 3-3.5 435,000-505,000 Nylon 3-7 290,000-580,000 Oak wood (along grain) 11 1,600,000 High-strength concrete (under 30 4,350,000 compression) Magnesium metal (Mg) 45 6,500,000 Aluminium alloy 69 10,000,000 Glass (all types) 72 10,400,000 Brass and bronze 103-124 17,000,000
  • 12. Titanium (Ti) 105-120 15,000,000-17,500,000 Carbon fiber reinforced plastic 10 - 20 1,500,000 - 3,200,000 (unidirectional, along grain) Wrought iron and steel 190-210 30,000,000 Tungsten (W) 400-410 58,000,000-59,500,000 Silicon carbide (SiC) 450 65,000,000 Tungsten carbide (WC) 450-650 65,000,000-94,000,000 Single carbon nanotube [1] 1,000+ 145,000,000 Diamond (C) 1,050-1,200 150,000,000-175,000,000