Title: Failure Theories (5.3-5.8, 5.14)
1Failure Theories(5.3-5.8, 5.14)
- MAE 316 Strength of Mechanical Components
- NC State University Department of Mechanical and
Aerospace Engineering
2Example
3Static Loading
- Failure theories
- For a given stress state (s1, s2, s3) use
properties from a simple tension test (Sy, Sut)
to assess the strength.
4Static Loading
- For what values of T and F will the material fail
if the yield strength is Sy? - If T 0
- For T and F non-zero, how do we calculate an
equivalent or effective stress to assess the
strength?
5Ductile vs Brittle
6Maximum Normal Stress Theory (5.8)
- Failure occurs when maximum principal stress
exceeds the ultimate strength. - Primarily applies to brittle materials
- Principal stresses s1, s2, s3
- Define sa, sb, sc where
- sa max (s1, s2, s3)
- sc min (s1, s2, s3)
- sb is the value in between
7Maximum Normal Stress Theory (5.8)
- For failure
- sa Sut if sa gt 0 (where Sut is ultimate
strength in tension) - sc -Suc if sc lt 0 (where Suc is ultimate
strength in compression) - Case I Uni-axial tension (bar, sx so P/A, sy
txy 0) - s1 so, s2 0 s3 0 (plane stress)
- sa so, sb 0, sc 0
- Failure when so Sut ?
8Maximum Normal Stress Theory (5.8)
- Case 2 Pure torsion (shaft, txy Tr/J, sx sy
0) - s1 txy, s2 -txy s3 0 (plane stress)
- sa txy, sb 0, sc -txy
- Failure when t xy Sut or t xy Suc ?
- Does not agree with experimental data.
- Experimental data would show that failure occurs
when t 0.6 Sut.
9Maximum Shear Stress Theory (5.4)
- Tresca yield criterion
- Failure occurs when the maximum shear stress
exceeds the yield strength (max shear stress in a
tension test is Sy/2). - Applies to ductile materials.
10Maximum Shear Stress Theory (5.4)
- Case I Uni-axial tension (bar, sx so P/A, sy
txy 0) - s1 so, s2 0 s3 0 (plane stress)
- sa so, sb 0, sc 0
- tmax so/2 Sy/2
- Failure when so Sy ?
- Case 2 Pure torsion (shaft, txy Tr/J, sx sy
0) - s1 txy, s2 -txy s3 0 (plane stress)
- sa txy, sb 0, sc -txy
- tmax txy
- Failure when t xy Sy/2 ?
11Distortion Energy Theory (5.5)
- von Mises theory
- Failure occurs when
-
- Applies to ductile materials.
12Distortion Energy Theory (5.5)
- Case I Uni-axial tension (bar, sx so P/A, sy
txy 0) - s1 so, s2 0 s3 0 (plane stress)
- so2 so2 2Sy2
- Failure when so Sy ?
- Case 2 Pure torsion (shaft, txy Tr/J, sx sy
0) - s1 txy, s2 -txy s3 0 (plane stress)
- (txy txy)2 txy2 txy2 2Sy2
- 6 txy2 2Sy2
- Failure when t xy 0.577Sy ?
- Agrees very closely with experiments!
- Section 5.14 in the textbook summarizes failure
theories.
13Example
- Find the minimum allowable diameter, with a
factor of safety of 2, using both Tresca and von
Mises formulas. Assume Sy 50,000 psi, P 500
lbs, T 1000 in-lb, and L 5 in.
14Stress Concentration Factor(3.13)
- MAE 316 Strength of Mechanical Components
- NC State Department of Mechanical and Aerospace
Engineering
15Examples
16Stress Concentration Factor (3.13)
- Consider the following two stress analysis
problems
17Stress Concentration Factor (3.13)
- For a plate with a hole, the maximum stress
occurs around the hole.
18Stress Concentration Factor (3.13)
- Maximum stress is defined using a stress
concentration factor, Kt.
19Example
- For a plate with w 2.0 in. and t 1.0 in.
subject to a 50,000 lb axial load, find the
maximum stress for d 0, 0.1 in., 0.5 in., and
1.0 in.
20Stress Concentration Factor (3.13)
- What if the hole is elliptical?
(hole)
(crack)
21Stress Concentration Factor (3.13)
- This suggests that structures with sharp cracks
could not sustain any level of applied stress
without failure. - This cannot be correct fracture mechanics
analysis will resolve this.
22Stress Concentration Factor (3.13)
- Other types of stress concentrations (Appendix
A-15) - Plate with fillet
- Plate with notch
- Shaft with fillet
- Grooved shaft
23Fracture Mechanics(5.12, 5.14)
- MAE 316 Strength of Mechanical Components
- NC State University Department of Mechanical and
Aerospace Engineering
24Fracture Mechanics (5.12)
25Fracture Mechanics (5.12)
- For a sharp crack, Kt ? 8, smax ? 8.
- The conclusion is that P gt 0 will lead to
failure, but this is not reasonable.
26Stress Intensity Factor (5.12)
- Figure 5-23 Crack deformation types (a) mode I,
opening (b) mode 2, sliding (c) mode III,
tearing
27Stress Intensity Factor (5.12)
- In fracture mechanics, design analysis is based
not on stress, but stress intensity factor. - Stress intensity modification factors vary
depending on load and geometry. - Refer to Figures 5-25 through 5-29 in the
textbook.
28Stress Intensity Factor (7.3)
- a/w ?
- 0 (w?8) 1.12
- 0.2 1.37
- 0.4 2.11
- 0.5 2.83
Table 7.1 Case B
- So, for the cracked plate shown previously
29Stress Intensity Factor (5.12)
- So, for the cracked plate shown previously
Figure 5-26
30Fracture Toughness (5.12)
- Failure will occur when K KIc (KIc is fracture
toughness, a material property). -
- Failure means the crack extends unstably and
the structure fractures (i.e. breaks).
31Fracture Toughness (5.12)
- In fracture mechanics, factor of safety can also
be expressed as
32Fracture Toughness (5.12)
- Two different analysis methods
- To design conservatively for safety, we must do
both analyses.
33Example
- The cracked plate shown below is made of 4340
steel has Sy 240 ksi and KIc 50 ksi(in)1/2.
Find the maximum allowable load, P, that can be
applied to the beam without failure. - Given b 1 in, h 2 in, L 24 in, a 0.25 in
34Example
- Find the stress intensity factor for a plate with
a center crack if the average normal stress in
the plate is 10 ksi. - Given 2a 3 in and 2b 10 in, d4 in
35Example
- Find the stress intensity factor for a plate with
an edge crack if the average normal stress in the
plate is 10 ksi. - Given a 3 in and b 10 in
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38A Real-Life Example of Fracture
39A Real-Life Example of Fracture