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In continuum mechanics, the concept of stress, introduced by Cauchy around 1822, is a measure of the average amount of force exerted per unit area of a surface within a deformable body on which internal forces act (Figure 1.1). In other words, it is a measure of the intensity or internal distribution of the total internal forces acting within a deformable body across imaginary surfaces. These internal forces are produced between the particles in the body as a reaction to external forces applied on the body. External forces are either surface forces or body forces. Because the loaded deformable body is assumed as a continuum, these internal forces are distributed continuously within the volume of the material body, i.e., the stress distribution in the body is expressed as a piecewise continuous function of space coordinates and time. The SI unit for stress is the pascal (symbol Pa), which is equivalent to one newton (force) per square meter (unit area). The unit for stress is the same as that of pressure, which is also a measure of force per unit area. Engineering quantities are usually measured in megapascals (MPa) or gigapascals (GPa). In imperial units, stress is expressed in pounds-force per square inch (psi) or kilopounds-force per square inch (ksi). For the simple case of a body axially loaded, e.g., a prismatic bar subjected to tension or compression by a force passing through its centroid (Figure 1.2), the stress In general, however, the stress is not uniformly distributed over a cross section of a material body, and consequently the stress at a point on a given area is different from the average stress over the entire area. Therefore, it is necessary to define the stress not over a given area but at a specific point in the body (Figure 1.1). According to Cauchy, the stress at any point in an object, assumed to be a continuum, is completely defined by the nine components The Cauchy stress tensor obeys the tensor transformation law under a change in the system of coordinates. A graphical representation of this transformation law is the Mohr's circle for stress. The Cauchy stress tensor is used for stress analysis of material bodies experiencing small deformations. For large deformations, also called finite deformations, other measures of stress are required, such as the first and second Piola-Kirchhoff stress tensors, the Biot stress tensor, and the Kirchhoff stress tensor. According to the principle of conservation of linear momentum, if the continuum body is in static equilibrium it can be demonstrated that the components of the Cauchy stress tensor in every material point in the body satisfy the equilibrium equations (Cauchy's equations of motion for zero acceleration). At the same time, according to the principle of conservation of angular momentum, equilibrium requires that the summation of moments with respect to an arbitrary point is zero, which leads to the conclusion that the stress tensor is symmetric, thus having only six independent stress components, instead of the original nine. There are certain invariants associated with the stress tensor, whose values do not depend upon the coordinate system chosen, or the area element upon which the stress tensor operates. These are the three eigenvalues of the stress tensor, which are called the principal stresses. The determination of the internal distribution of stresses, i.e., stress analysis, is required in engineering, e.g., civil engineering and mechanical engineering, for the study and design of structures, e.g., tunnels, dams, mechanical parts, and structural frames among others, under prescribed or expected loads. To determine the distribution of stress in the structure it is necessary to solve a boundary-value problem by specifying the boundary conditions, i.e. displacements and/or forces on the boundary. Constitutive equations, such as Hooke's Law for linear elastic materials, are used to describe the stress:strain relationship in these calculations. A boundary-value problem based on the theory of elasticity is applied to structures expected to deform elastically, i.e. infinitesimal strains, under design loads. When the loads applied to the structure induce plastic deformations, the theory of plasticity is implemented. Approximate solutions for boundary-value problems can be obtained through the use of numerical methods such as the Finite Element Method, the Finite Difference Method, and the Boundary Element Method, which are implemented in computer programs. Analytical or close-form solutions can be obtained for simple geometries, constitutive relations, and boundary conditions. The stress analysis can be simplified in cases where the physical dimensions and the distribution of loads allows the structure to be assumed as one-dimensional or two-dimensional. For a two-dimensional analysis a plane stress or a plane strain condition can be assumed. Alternatively, experimental determination of stresses can be carried out using the photoelastic method. In design of structures, calculated stresses are restricted to be less than an specified allowable stress, also known as working or designed stress. Allowable stress is chosen as some fraction of the yield strength or of the ultimate strength of the material of which the structure is made. The ratio of the ultimate stress to the allowable stress is defines as the factor of safety. Laboratory tests are usually performed on material samples in order to determine the yield strength and the ultimate strength that the material can withstand before failure. Solids, liquids, and gases have stress fields. Static fluids support normal stress but will flow under shear stress. Moving viscous fluids can support shear stress (dynamic pressure). Solids can support both shear and normal stress, with ductile materials failing under shear and brittle materials failing under normal stress. All materials have temperature dependent variations in stress related properties, and non-Newtonian materials have rate-dependent variations.
[edit] Definition of stressIn the mechanics of a continuum, a material body can be acted upon by external forces that produce motion and which are of two kind: surface forces and body forces. Surface forces or contact forces, designated by Body forces, such as gravitational forces, electromagnetic forces, and inertial forces, are forces distributed over the entire volume of a body, i.e. acting on every point in the body. In the case of gravitational and inertial forces, the intensity of the force depends on or is proportional to the mass density These acting external forces (surface and body forces) are then transmitted from point to point within the material body, leading to the generation of internal forces. The transmission of such forces is governed by the conservation laws of linear and angular momenta (Newton's Second Law of motion). For bodies in static equilibrium, these laws are related to the principles of equilibrium of forces and moments, respectively. The measure of the intensity of this internal forces acting within the material body across imaginary surfaces is called stress. In other words, stress is a measure of the average quantity of force exerted per unit area of the surface on which these internal forces act. For example, if we compare a force applied to a small area and a distributed load of the same resulting magnitude applied to a larger area, we find that the effects or intensities of these two forces are locally different because the stresses are not the same. Stress is related to deformations in the body. This relationship is expressed through constitutive equations. [edit] Stress in a prismatic barFirst the simple case of a prismatic bar subjected to an axial force A different type of stress is obtained when transverse forces In general, however, the stress is not uniformly distributed over the cross section of a material body, and consequently the stress at a point on a given area is different from the average stress over the entire area. In Figure 1.3, the normal stress is observed in two planes Therefore, it is necessary to define the stress at a specific point in the surface. [edit] Cauchy's stress principleA material body in equilibrium subjected to surface forces The distribution of force on the area This equation means that the stress vector depends on the location in the body and the orientation of the plane on which it is acting. By Newton's third law of motion, the stress vectors acting on opposite sides of the same surface are equal in magnitude and opposite in direction. Thus, The state of stress at a point in the body is then defined by all the stress vectors Depending on the orientation of the plane under consideration, the stress vector may not necessarily be perpendicular to that plane, and can be resolved into two components:
where
where Assuming a material element (Figure 2.2) with planes perpendicular to the coordinate axes of a Cartesian coordinate system, the stress vectors associated with each of the element planes, i.e. In index notation this is The nine components where
The first index The Voigt notation representation of the Cauchy stress tensor takes advantage of the symmetry of the stress tensor to express the stress as a 6-dimensional vector of the form The Voigt notation is used extensively in representing stress-strain relations in solid mechanics and for computational efficiency in numerical structural mechanics software. [edit] Relationship stress vector - stress tensorThe stress vector To prove the expression, we consider a tetrahedron with three faces oriented in the coordinate planes, and with an infinitesimal area Figure 2.3. Stress vector acting on a plane with normal vector n. A note on the sign convention: The tetrahedron is formed by slicing a parallelepiped along an arbitrary plane n. So, the force acting on the plane n is the reaction exerted by the other half of the parallelepiped and has an opposite sign. where the right hand side of the equation represent the product of the mass enclosed by the tetrahedron and its acceleration: and To consider the limiting case as the tetrahedron shrinks to a point, h must go to 0 (intuitively, plane or, equivalently, Or, in matrix form we have This equation expresses the components of the stress vector acting on an arbitrary plane with normal vector [edit] Transformation rule of the stress tensorIt can be shown that the stress tensor is a second order tensor, which is a statement of how it transforms under a change of the coordinate system. From an where Expanding the matrix operation, and simplifying some terms by taking advantage of the symmetry of the stress tensor, gives: A graphical representation of this transformation of stresses, for a two-dimensional (plane stress and plane strain) and a general three-dimensional state of stresses, is the Mohr's circle for stresses [edit] Normal and shear stressesThe magnitude of the normal stress component, The magnitude of the shear stress component, where [edit] Equilibrium equations and symmetry of the stress tensorWhen a body is in equilibrium the components of the stress tensor in every point of the body satisfy the equilibrium equations,
At the same time, equilibrium requires that the summation of moments with respect to an arbitrary point is zero, which leads to the conclusion that the stress tensor is symmetric, i.e.
However, in the presence of couple-stresses, i.e. moments per unit volume, the stress tensor is non-symmetric. This also is the case when the Knudsen number is close to one, [edit] Principal stresses and stress invariantsAt every point in a stressed body there are at least three planes, called principal planes, with normal vectors The components A stress vector parallel to the normal vector where Knowing that This is a homogeneous system, i.e. equal to zero, of three linear equations where Expanding the determinant leads to the characteristic equation where The characteristic equation has three real roots For each eigenvalue, there is a non-trivial solution for If we choose a coordinate system with axes oriented to the principal directions, then the normal stresses will be the principal stresses and the stress tensor is represented by a diagonal matrix: The principal stresses may be combined to form the stress invariants, Because of its simplicity, working and thinking in the principal coordinate system is often very useful when considering the state of the elastic medium at a particular point. [edit] Maximum and minimum shear stress
The maximum and minimum in-plane shear stress can be calculated as 1/2 of the maximum difference between principle stresses. [edit] Stress deviator tensorThe stress tensor
where The deviatoric stress tensor can be obtained by subtracting the hydrostatic stress tensor from the stress tensor: [edit] Invariants of the stress deviator tensorAs it is a second order tensor, the stress deviator tensor also has a set of invariants, which can be obtained using the same procedure used to calculate the invariants of the stress tensor. It can be shown that the principal directions of the stress deviator tensor where Because A quantity called the equivalent stress or von Mises stress is commonly used in solid mechanics. The equivalent stress is defined as [edit] Octahedral stressesConsidering the principal directions as the coordinate axes, a plane whose normal vector makes equal angles with each of the principal axes (i.e. having direction cosines equal to Knowing that the stress tensor of point O (Figure 6) in the principal axes is the stress vector on an octahedral plane is then given by: The normal component of the stress vector at point O associated with the octahedral plane is which is the mean normal stress or hydrostatic stress. This value is the same in all eight octahedral planes. The shear stress on the octahedral plane is then [edit] Analysis of stressThe analysis of stress within a body implies the determination at each point of the body of the magnitudes of the nine stress components. In other words, it is the determination of the internal distribution of stresses. A stress analysis is required in engineering, e.g., civil engineering and mechanical engineering, for the study and design of structures, e.g., tunnels, dams, mechanical parts, and structural frames among others, under prescribed or expected loads. To determine the distribution of stress in the structure it is necessary to solve a boundary-value problem by specifying the boundary conditions, i.e. displacements and/or forces on the boundary. Constitutive equations, such as e.g. Hooke's Law for linear elastic materials, are used to describe the stress:strain relationship in these calculations. A boundary-value problem based on the theory of elasticity is applied to structures expected to deform elastically, i.e. infinitesimal strains, under design loads. When the loads applied to the structure induce plastic deformations, the theory of plasticity is implemented. Approximate solutions for boundary-value problems can be obtained through the use numerical methods such as the Finite Element Method, the Finite Difference Method, and the Boundary Element Method, which are implemented in computer programs. Analytical or close-form solutions can be obtained for simple geometries, constitutive relations, and boundary conditions. Alternatively, experimental determination of stresses can be carried out using the photoelastic method. In design of structures, calculated stresses are restricted to be less than an specified allowable stress, also known as working or designed stress, that is chosen as some fraction of the yield strength or of the ultimate strength of the material which the structure is made of. The ratio of the ultimate stress to the allowable stress is defined as the factor of safety. Laboratory test are usually performed on material samples in order to determine the yield strength and the ultimate strength that the material can withstand before failure. All real objects occupy a three-dimensional space. The stress analysis can be simplified in cases where the physical dimensions and the loading conditions allows the structure to be assumed as one-dimensional or two-dimensional. For a two-dimensional analysis a plane stress or a plane strain condition can be assumed. [edit] Uniaxial stressIf two of the dimensions of the object are very large or very small compared to the others, the object may be modelled as one-dimensional. In this case the stress tensor has only one component and is indistinguishable from a scalar. One-dimensional objects include a piece of wire loaded at the ends and a metal sheet loaded on the face and viewed up close and through the cross section. When a structural element is elongated or compressed, its cross-sectional area changes by an amount that depends on the Poisson's ratio of the material. In engineering applications, structural members experience small deformations and the reduction in cross-sectional area is very small and can be neglected, i.e., the cross-sectional area is assumed constant during deformation. For this case, the stress is called engineering stress or nominal stress. In some other cases, e.g., elastomers and plastic materials, the change in cross-sectional area is significant, and the stress must be calculated assuming the current cross-sectional area instead of the initial cross-sectional area. This is termed true stress and is expressed as
where
The relationship between true strain and engineering strain is given by
In uniaxial tension, true stress is then greater than nominal stress. The converse holds in compression. [edit] Plane stressA state of plane stress exist when one of the three principal
The corresponding strain tensor is: in which the non-zero [edit] Plane strainIf one dimension is very large compared to the others, the principal strain in the direction of the longest dimension is constrained and can be assumed as zero, yielding a plane strain condition. In this case, though all principal stresses are non-zero, the principal stress in the direction of the longest dimension can be disregarded for calculations. Thus, allowing a two dimensional analysis of stresses, e.g. a dam analyzed at a cross section loaded by the reservoir. [edit] Stress transformation in plane stress and plane strainConsider a point These equations indicate that in a plane stress or plane strain condition, one can determine the stress components at a point on all directions, i.e. as a function of The principal directions (Figure 8.3), i.e. orientation of the planes where the shear stress components are zero, can be obtained by making the previous equation for the shear stress and we obtain This equation defines two values The principal stresses where which is the equation of a circle of radius When Then the maximum shear stress Then the minimum shear stress [edit] Mohr's circle for stressThe Mohr's circle, named after Christian Otto Mohr, is a two-dimensional graphical representation of the state of stress at a point. The abscissa, Karl Culmann was the first to conceive a graphical representation for stresses while considering longitudinal and vertical stresses in horizontal beams during bending. Mohr's contribution extended the use of this representation for both two- and three-dimensional stresses and developed a failure criterion based on the stress circle. [edit] Mohr's circle for plane stress or plane strainGiven known stress components According to the sign convention for engineering mechanics, in disciplines such as mechanical engineering and structural engineering, which is the one used in this article, for the construction of the Mohr circle the normal stresses are positive if they are outward to the plane of action (tension), and shear stresses are positive if they rotate clockwise about the point in consideration. In geomechanics, i.e. soil mechanics and rock mechanics, however, normal stresses are considered positive when they are inward to the plane of action (compression), and shear stresses are positive if they rotate counterclockwise about the point in consideration. To construct the Mohr circle of stress for a state of plane stress, or plane strain, first we plot two points in the As demonstrated in the previous section, the radius The principal stresses are then the abscissa of the points of intersection of the circle with the Using the Mohr circle one can find the stress components The first approach relies on the fact that the angle The second approach involves the determination of a point on the Mohr circle called the pole or the origin of planes. Any straight line drawn from the pole will intersect the Mohr circle at a point that represents the state of stress on a plane inclined at the same orientation (parallel) in space as that line. Therefore, knowing the stress components [edit] Mohr's circle for a general three-dimensional state of stressesTo construct the Mohr's circle for a general three-dimensional case of stresses at a point, the values of the principal stresses Considering the principal axes as the coordinate system, instead of the general Knowing that Since
These expressions can be rewritten as which are the equations of the three Mohr's circles for stress These equations for the Mohr's circles show that all admissible stress points [edit] Alternative measures of stressMain article: Stress measures The Cauchy stress tensor is not the only measure of stress that is used in practice. Other measures of stress include the first and second Piola-Kirchhoff stress tensors, the Biot stress tensor, and the Kirchhoff stress tensor. [edit] Piola-Kirchhoff stress tensorIn the case of finite deformations, the Piola-Kirchhoff stress tensors are used to express the stress relative to the reference configuration. This is in contrast to the Cauchy stress tensor which expresses the stress relative to the present configuration. For infinitesimal deformations or rotations, the Cauchy and Piola-Kirchhoff tensors are identical. These tensors take their names from Gabrio Piola and Gustav Kirchhoff. [edit] 1st Piola-Kirchhoff stress tensorWhereas the Cauchy stress tensor, where In terms of components with respect to an orthonormal basis, the first Piola-Kirchhoff stress is given by Because it relates different coordinate systems, the 1st Piola-Kirchhoff stress is a two-point tensor. In general, it is not symmetric. The 1st Piola-Kirchhoff stress is the 3D generalization of the 1D concept of engineering stress. If the material rotates without a change in stress state (rigid rotation), the components of the 1st Piola-Kirchhoff stress tensor will vary with material orientation. The 1st Piola-Kirchhoff stress is energy conjugate to the deformation gradient. [edit] 2nd Piola-Kirchhoff stress tensorWhereas the 1st Piola-Kirchhoff stress relates forces in the current configuration to areas in the reference configuration, the 2nd Piola-Kirchhoff stress tensor In index notation with respect to an orthonormal basis, This tensor is symmetric. If the material rotates without a change in stress state (rigid rotation), the components of the 2nd Piola-Kirchhoff stress tensor will remain constant, irrespective of material orientation. The 2nd Piola-Kirchhoff stress tensor is energy conjugate to the Green-Lagrange finite strain tensor. [edit] See also[edit] References
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