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By Ryan Wojes
All metals deform (stretch or compress) when they are stressed,
to a greater or lesser degree.
This deformation is the visible sign of metal stress called
metal strain and is possible because of a characteristic of these metals
called ductility — their ability to be elongated or reduced in length
without breaking.
Calculating Stress
Stress is defined as force per unit area as shown in the
equation σ = F / A.
Stress is often represented by the Greek letter sigma (σ)
and expressed in newtons per square meter, or pascals (Pa).
For greater stresses, it is expressed in megapascals (106 or 1 million Pa) or gigapascals
(109 or 1 billion Pa).
Force (F) is mass x acceleration, and so 1 newton is the mass
required to accelerate a 1-kilogram object at a rate of 1 meter per second
squared.
And the area (A) in the equation is specifically the
cross-sectional area of the metal that undergoes stress.
Let's say a force of 6 newtons is applied to a bar with a
diameter of 6 centimeters.
The area of the cross section of the bar is calculated by using
the formula A = π r2.
The radius is half of the diameter, so the radius is 3 cm or
0.03 m and the area is 2.2826 x 10-3 m2.
A = 3.14 x (0.03 m)2 = 3.14 x
0.0009 m2 = 0.002826 m2 or 2.2826 x
10-3 m2
Now we use the area and the known force in the equation for
calculating stress:
σ = 6 newtons / 2.2826 x 10-3 m2 = 2,123 newtons / m2 or 2,123 Pa
Calculating Strain
Strain is the amount of deformation (either stretch or
compression) caused by the stress divided by the initial length of the metal as
shown in the equation ε = dl / l0.
If there is an increase in the length of a piece of metal due to
stress, it is referred to as tensile strain.
If there's a reduction in length, it's called compressive
strain.
Strain is often represented by the Greek letter epsilon (ε), and in the equation, dl is the
change in length and l0 is the initial
length.
Strain has no unit of measurement because it's a length divided
by a length and so is expressed only as a number.
For example, a wire that's initially 10 centimeters long is
stretched to 11.5 centimeters; its strain is 0.15.
ε = 1.5 cm
(the change in length or amount of stretch) / 10 cm (initial length) = 0.15
Ductile Materials
Some metals, such as stainless steel and many other alloys, are
ductile and yield under stress.
Other metals, such as cast iron, fracture and break quickly
under stress. Of course, even stainless steel finally weakens and breaks if it
is put under enough stress.
Metals such as low-carbon steel bend rather than breaking under
stress.
At a certain level of stress, however, they reach a
well-understood yield point.
Once they reach that yield point, the metal becomes strain
hardened.
The metal becomes less ductile and, in one sense, becomes
harder.
But while strain hardening makes it less easy for the metal to
deform, it also makes the metal more brittle. Brittle metal can break, or fail,
quite easily.
Brittle Materials
Some metals are intrinsically brittle, which means they are
particularly liable to fracture.
Brittle metals include high-carbon steels. Unlike ductile materials,
these metals do not have a well-defined yield point.
Instead, when they reach a certain stress level, they break.
Brittle metals behave very much like other brittle materials
such as glass and concrete.
Like these materials, they are strong in certain ways — but
because they cannot bend or stretch, they are not appropriate for certain uses.
Metal Fatigue
When ductile metals are stressed, they deform. If the stress is
removed before the metal reaches its yield point, the metal returns to its
former shape.
While the metal appears to have returned to its original state,
however, tiny faults have appeared at the molecular level.
Each time the metal deforms and then returns to its original
shape, more molecular faults occur.
After many deformations, there are so many molecular faults that
the metal cracks. When enough cracks form for them to merge, irreversible metal
fatigue occurs.
Ryan
Wojes
Greater
Pittsburgh Area, Pennsylvania
Education
Northwestern
University
Expertise
Investing
Commodities
Metals
Introduction
Worked
at a startup materials design company before beginning his career in heavy
manufacturing
Worked as
a Metallurgical Engineer for ArcelorMittal USA, transforming scrap metal into
useful steel products
Author
of a subnanoscale study of the nucleation, growth, and coarsening kinetics for
the International Journal of Materials Research in 2008
Former
writer for The Balance
Author
of a subnanoscale study of the nucleation, growth, and coarsening kinetics for
the International Journal of Materials Research in 2008
Experience
Ryan
Wojes is a former writer for The Balance covering investing, commodities, and
metals.
He
serves as Superintendent of Heat Treating at Union Electrical Steel in
Pennsylvania. He previously served as Superintendent of Quality Assurance and
Process Engineering at Union Electric Akers and as Senior Metallurgical
Engineer at EVRAZ North America in Portland, Oregon.
He wrote
a subnanoscale study of the nucleation, growth, and coarsening kinetics of
Cu-rich precipitates in a multicomponent Fe-Cu based steel for the
International Journal of Materials Research in 2008. He also won first
place for his undergraduate research at the AISTech 2007 Project Presentation
Contest.
Education
Ryan
holds a bachelor's degree in materials science and engineering from
Northwestern University.
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