Tension and Compression Test
Tension and Compression Test
Tension
Compression
Classifying Loads on Materials
pulling apart
Cargo
Pressure
Classifying Loads on Materials
• Strain:
- Ratio of elongation of a material to the original length
- unit deformation
Lo e
e
ε
Lo L
e : elongation (ft)
Lo : unloaded(original) length of a material (ft)
ε : strain (ft/ft) or (in/in)
Elongation:
e L Lo
L : loaded length of a material (ft)
Conventional Tension & Compression test
5.3 Stress-Strain Diagram
Elastic region
Plastic slope=Young’s(elastic) modulus
Region yield strength
Plastic region
ultimate tensile strength
Elastic strain hardening
σ Eε Region fracture
1 4
σ
E
ε E
σy
Strain ( ) (e/Lo)
ε 2 ε1
Stress-Strain Diagram
Elastic region
Plastic slope=Young’s(elastic) modulus
Region yield strength
Plastic region
ultimate tensile strength
Elastic strain hardening
σ Eε Region fracture
1 4
σ
E
ε E
σy
Strain ( ) (e/Lo)
ε 2 ε1
Stress-Strain Diagram
-The material will return to its original shape (Point 1) once an applied load
is removed.
- The stress within the material is less than what is required to create a
plastic behavior (deform or stretch significantly without increasing stress).
Stress-Strain Diagram
Elastic region
Plastic slope=Young’s(elastic) modulus
Region yield strength
Plastic region
ultimate tensile strength
Elastic strain hardening
σ Eε Region fracture
1 4
σ
E
ε E
σy
Strain ( ) (e/Lo)
ε 2 ε1
Stress-Strain Diagram
Strain Hardening
- If the material is loaded again from Point 4, the
curve will follow back to Point 3 with the same
Elastic Modulus(slope).
- The material now has a higher yield strength of
Point 4.
- Raising the yield strength by permanently straining
the material is called Strain Hardening.
Stress-Strain Diagram
ultimate
tensile
strength 3 necking
UTS
E
S l op e =
Strain
yield Fracture
strength Hardening
y 5
2
Stress (F/A)
Elastic region
Plastic slope=Young’s(elastic) modulus
Region yield strength
Plastic region
ultimate tensile strength
Elastic strain hardening
σ Eε Region fracture
1 4
σ
E
ε E
σy
Strain ( ) (e/Lo)
ε 2 ε1
Stress-Strain Diagram
Elastic region
Plastic slope=Young’s(elastic) modulus
Region yield strength
Plastic region
ultimate tensile strength
Elastic strain hardening
σ Eε Region fracture
1 4
σ
E
ε E
σy
Strain ( ) (e/Lo)
ε 2 ε1
Stress-Strain Diagram
A36 Steel
5.4 Material Properties
• Strength
• Hardness
• Ductility
• Brittleness
• Toughness
Material Properties
Strength:
- Measure of the material property to resist deformation
and to maintain its shape
- It is quantified in terms of yield stress y or ultimate
tensile strength ult .
- High carbon steels and metal alloys have higher strength
than pure metals.
- Ceramic also exhibit high strength characteristics.
Material Properties
Hardness:
- Measure of the material property to resist indentation,
abrasion and wear.
- It is quantified by hardness scale such as Rockwell and
Brinell hardness scale that measure indentation /
penetration under a load.
- Hardness and Strength correlate well because both
properties are related to inter-molecular bonding. A
high-strength material is typically resistant to wear
and abrasion.
A comparison of hardness of some typical materials:
Pure Aluminum 15
Pure Copper 35
Diamond 8000
Sand 1000
Material Properties
Ductility:
- Measure of the material property to deform before failure.
- It is quantified by reading the value of strain at the
fracture point on the stress strain curve.
- Ductile materials can be pulled or drawn into pipes, wire,
and other structural shapes
- Examples of ductile material :
low carbon steel
aluminum
copper
brass
Material Properties
Brittleness:
- Measure of the material’s inability to deform before failure.
- The opposite of ductility.
- Example of ductile material : glass, high carbon steel,
ceramics
Brittle
Stress
Ductile
Strain
Material Properties
Toughness:
- Measure of the material ability to absorb energy.
- It is measured by two methods.
a) Integration of stress strain curve
- Slow absorption of energy
- Absorbed energy per unit volume
unit : (lb/in²) *(in/in) =lb·in/in³
b) Charpy test
- Ability to absorb energy of an impact without
fracturing.
- Impact toughness can be measured.
Material Properties
Ductile
Behavior
Brittle Transition
Behavior Temperature
Temperature (°F)
Material Properties
Temperature :
Environment:
- Sulfites, Chlorine, Oxygen in water,
Radiation, Pressure
Ways to Effect / Alter Material Properties
Alloying (Adding other elements to alter the molecular properties):
- Steel: Carbon, chromium, molybdenum, nickel, tungsten,
manganese
- Aluminum: Copper, manganese, silicon, zinc, magnesium
Thermal Treatments:
Tempering:
- Steel is heated below the critical temperature and
cooled slowly.
- Used with hardening to reduce the internal stresses.
Hot-Working:
- Forming of shapes while material is hot.
- Less internal stresses due to annealing (change in
the molecular structure).
Cold-Working:
- Forming shapes while material is cold.
- Causes internal stresses, resulting in a stronger shape.
Corrosion & Corrosion Protection
Corrosion Protection:
- Design to eliminate conditions favorable to corrosion
- You, a wire brush, and paint
- Cathodic Protection
- Charging the metal to slow/ stop reaction
with other elements
- Providing a sacrificial metal to give up ions
instead of the structure giving up ions (and
corroding)
Example: