Stress, Strain & Tensile Strength
- Opposite forces can deform an object
- If the forces stretch the object, then they are tensile forces
- Tensile forces lead to the two properties of materials known as tensile stress and tensile strain
Tensile Stress
- Tensile stress is defined as the force exerted per unit cross-sectional area of a material
- The ultimate tensile stress is the maximum force per original cross-sectional area a wire is able to support until it breaks
- Stress has the units of pascals (Pa), which is the same units as pressure (also force ÷ area)
Tensile Strain
- Strain is the extension per unit length
- This is a deformation of a solid due to stress in the form of elongation or contraction
- The strain is a dimensionless unit because it’s the ratio of lengths
- Sometimes strain might be written as a percentage
- For example, extending a 0.1 m wire by 0.005 m would produce a strain of (0.005 ÷ 0.1) × 100 = 5 %
Ultimate Tensile Strength
- The ultimate tensile strength of a material is defined as:
The maximum amount of load or stress a material can handle until it fractures and breaks
- The table lists some common materials and their tensile strength:
Tensile strength of various materials
Worked example
A brass wire of length 4.50 m and a radius of 0.2 mm is extended to a total length of 4.53 when a tensile force of 50 N is applied.Calculate for the brass wire:
a) The tensile stress
b) The tensile strain
Part (a)
Step 1: Write down the tensile stress equation
Tensile stress = Force ÷ Cross-sectional area
Step 2: Calculate the cross-sectional area, A of the wire
- A wire has a circular cross-sectional area = πr2
Area = π × (0.2 × 10-3)2 =1.2566 × 10-7 m2
Step 3: Substitute values in the tensile stress equation
Tensile stress = 50 ÷ (1.2566 × 10-7) = 397.899 × 106 Pa = 400 MPa
Part (b)
Step 1: Write down the tensile strain equation
Tensile strain = Extension ÷ Original length
Step 2: Determine the extension
- The extension is total length – the original length
Extension = 4.53 – 4.50 = 0.03 m
Step 3: Substitute values in the tensile strain equation
Tensile strain = 0.03 ÷ 4.50 = 6.7 × 10-3
Examiner Tip
Since strain is a ratio, the extension and original length do not have to be calculated in metres. As long as they both have the same units, the strain will be correct