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Chap2 - Analysis of Stress

This chapter discusses concepts and definitions related to stress analysis. It introduces normal stress under axial loading, shearing stress in connections, bearing stress, and units of stress. It also examines stresses on an inclined plane for an axially loaded member and provides example problems calculating normal and shearing stresses in various structural configurations.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
78 views37 pages

Chap2 - Analysis of Stress

This chapter discusses concepts and definitions related to stress analysis. It introduces normal stress under axial loading, shearing stress in connections, bearing stress, and units of stress. It also examines stresses on an inclined plane for an axially loaded member and provides example problems calculating normal and shearing stresses in various structural configurations.

Uploaded by

FuSiang Chor
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Mechanics of Materials

Chapter 2

ANALYSIS OF STRESS:
CONCEPTS & DEFINITIONS
By Prof. Dr.-Ing. A.-B. Wang
Institute of Applied Mechanics
National Taiwan University
1

Contents
ANALYSIS OF STRESS: CONCEPTS & DEFINITIONS

 2-1 Introduction (Self read)


 2-2 Normal Stress Under Axial Loading
 2-3 Shearing Stress in Connections
 2-4 Bearing Stress
 2-5 Units of Stress
 2-6 Stresses on an Inclined Plane in an Axially Loaded Member
 2-7 Stress at a General Point in an Arbitrarily Loaded Member
 2-8 Two-Dimensional or Plane Stress
 2-9 The Stress Transformation Equations for Plane Stress
 2-10 Principal Stresses and Maximum Shearing Stress – Plane Stress
 2-11 Mohr’s Circle for Plane Stress
 2-12 General State of Stress at a Point

1
2-2 Normal Stress Under Axial Loading
Force
Definition: Stress 
Area
intensity of force
F
 avg 
A

F
  lim
A0 A

: “+”: tensile stress


“”: compressive stress
3

2-3 Shearing Stress in Connections


 Connections: rivets, bolts, pins, nails, welds

Single shear & double shear

V V
 avg    lim
A0 A
A
(Note: The shear stress  cannot be uniformly distributed over A. )
4

2
2-3 Shearing Stress in Connections
 Punching Shear periphery area = dt

http://thcarmor.theshoppe.com/images/rivet.jpg

www.mrs.org/microworld/ titanic.html

2-4 Bearing Stress


 Bearing stress: compressive normal stress

F
b 
A
6

3
2-5 Units of Stress

 USCS: United State Customary System (British units)


 SI: International System of Units
 Unit of stress: force per unit area (intensity of force)
 psi: pound per square inch
 ksi: kilo pound per square inch
 pound (lbf): 1 slug  1 ft/s2
 kip: kilo pound
 Pa: Pascal, Newton per square meter
 N: Newton, 1 kg  1 m/s2 = 0.2248 lbf
 MPa: mega (106) Newton per square meter
(1 bar = 0.1 MPa)
7

Example Problem 2-1(a)


A = 3.00 in2

Determine normal stress at


a b c cross-section a, b, and c=?

 F  FAB  81  0 FAB  81 kip (T)

 F  FBC  54  81  0 FBC  27 kip (T)

FCD  ?

4
Which one is correct?
 1. FCD = - 45 kip
 2. FCD = 45 kip
 3. FCD = - 18 kip
 4. FCD = 18 kip
 5. No correct answer

Example Problem 2-1(b)


A = 3.00 in2
 CD  ?
1. - 45 ksi
2. + 45 ksi
F 45
3. - 15 ksi  CD  CD   15.00 ksi  15.00 ksi (T)
A 3.00
4. + 15 ksi
5. No correct answer
 Can you draw the axial-force Diagram?

Points where concentrated forces act

10

5
Example Problem 2-3 (a)
P = 10 kips

d si  2.00 in d bo  2.00 in

ts  0.250 in tb  0.275 in
d p  0.750 in
 Determine shearing stress in the pin = ?

2V  10 V  5 kips
V 5
   11.317 ksi  11.32 ksi
A 4 (0.750) 2

11

Example Problem 2-3 (b)

 Replace the pin by a glued joint.


Length of glued joint = ?

A  dL  (2.00) L  2.00L in 2


V 10,000
   250 psi
A 2.00L

L  6.366 in  6.37 in

12

6
Example Problem 2-4 (a)
d so  150 mm
ts  15 mm
axial load = 150 kN
 Determine average bearing stress
between column and bearing plate = ?

A
4

 2
 
 
d o  d i2  1502  1202  6362 mm2  6362(10 6 ) m2
4
F 150(103 )
b   6
 23.58(106 ) N/m2  23.6 MPa
A 6362(10 )
13

Example Problem 2-4 (b)


 Assuming average bearing stress of bearing plate  3.25MPa
Determine diameter of bearing plate d = ?
d=?

 2
A d
4
F 150(103 )
b    3.25(106 )
A (  4) d 2
d  242.4(103 ) m  242 mm

14

7
p. 65
2-6 Stresses on an Inclined Plane in
an Axially Loaded Member

A distributed

equivalent resolve into


2 components
P P cos 
Average total stress savg  
|N | = P cos 
A cos  A
Not useful |V | = P sin 
for design!
15

p. 66
2-6 Stresses on an Inclined Plane in
an Axially Loaded Member
Assumption: stress uniformly distributed
P cos  P
n 
N
  cos 2  
P
1  cos 2
An A cos  A 2A
(2-7)

V P sin  P P
n     sin  cos    sin 2
An A cos  A 2A
(2-8)
 max  P A  max  P 2 A

q CCW: +
N = P cos 
V = - P sin   min  0  min   P 2 A

Axially loaded only!  and τ vanish at 90º


16

8
τ & τ
Remarks for xy yx
 The equality of n on orthogonal planes can be obtained as
follows: If only shear stresses are acting on the surfaces,

M z  0 :  yx dx dz dy   xy dy dz dx


stress direction

 xy  yx   xy
outward normal
Shear stresses tend to “skew”
the element diagonally.

  yx   xy is true even when there are normal stresses.


17

p. 67

τ & τ
Remarks for xy yx
 Failure plane under axial tension loading:
 brittle material:  ~ 0º
 ductile material:  ~ 45º
     90

P
n  sin 2
2A

Equal
magnitude
Change sense
(sign)

18

9
p. 68

Example Problem 2-6


Given: d = 1.25 in.  Find: n, n
N P (2-7)
n   (1  cos 2 )
An 2 A
1000
d  {1  cos[2  (33)]}
2   1.252 4
 573 psi

P (2-8)
 nt  sin 2
2A
1000
 sin[2  (33)]
2   1.252 4
 372 psi
19

p. 68

Example Problem 2-6


For d = 1.25 in. Alternatively,
P
n  (1  cos 2 ) (2-7)
2A
1000
 [1  cos(2  327)]
d 2   1.252 4
 573 psi

 P
 nt  sin 2 (2-8)
2A
1000
  sin(2  327)
2   1.252 4
 372 psi
20

10
p. 68

Example Problem 2-7


 Given: rectangular block with
cross section: 200  100 mm,
f = 36o,
n = 12.00 MPa (C) at section a-a
 Find:

 P=?
 On plane a-a, n = ?
 Maximum normal and shearing
stresses in the block = ?

Greek
Symbols

21

p. 69
f = 36o,
n = 12.00 MPa (C) at
Example Problem 2-7 section a-a

A  200(100)  20,000 mm 2  0.0200 m 2


An  A cos   0.020 cos 54  0.03403 m 2

N  n An  12(106 )(0.03403)  408.4 kN (C) 



 Fn -408.4  P cos 54°  0
P  694.8 kN  695 kN (C)

P 694.8( 103 )
n  sin 2  sin108  16.520( 106 ) N/m 2  16.52 MPa (eq.2-8)
2A 2( 0.0200 )

 max  ?
 max  ?
22

11
p. 69

Example Problem 2-7


 max  ? max  ?

1. max = 24.3 MPa; max = 18.25 Mpa 


2. max = -24.3 MPa; max = 18.25 Mpa 

3. max = 34.7 MPa; max = 17.35 Mpa


4. max = -34.7 MPa; max = 17.35 Mpa
5. None is correct

P 694.8(103 )
 max    34.74(106 ) N/m 2  34.7 MPa (C) (eq.2-9) at  = 0
A 0.0200
P 694.8(103 )
 max    17.35(106 ) N/m 2  17.35 MPa (eq.2-10) at  = 45
2 A 2(0.0200)
23

p. 72
2-7 Stress at a General Point in an
Arbitrarily Loaded Member
Stress distribution should not necessarily be uniform in a cross-section.
Section As A → 0, F → uniform,
Fn, Mn: resultants
through and Mn → 0
of distributed force
point O
on small area A

normal direction

M n  0 as A  0
Fnn
 n  lim normal stress
A0 A
Fn
S n  lim stress vector
A0 A Fnt
 n  lim shear stress
A0 A

24

12
p. 73
2-7 Stress at a General Point in an
Arbitrarily Loaded Member

Resolve x into
components
xy and xz

Sn  ne n  net
  x e x   xy e y   xz e z

Co-plane stress components are


vectors.

25

p. 73

Remarks
 Resolve Sn on three mutually perpendicular planes
 the state of stress at a point is completely described.
 Sign convention
 6 independent components outward normal

xy

stress direction

x: normal stress

26

13
p. 74

2-8 Two-Dimensional or Plane Stress


All forces are confined on a
plane, for example, x-y plane
 z   zx   zy  0
which implies
 xz   yz  0

Plane stress occurs at


points on the outside surface of a body
points within thin plates where the z-components
of force are zero.

27

p. 75
2-9 The Stress Transformation
Equations for Plane Stress
 z  0,  zx   zy  0
t

dA

28

14
p. 76
2-9 The Stress Transformation
Equations for Plane Stress
t
+ F n   n dA   x dA cos  cos    y dA sin  sin 
n
  yx dA sin  cos    xy dA cos  sin   0

  yx   xy

 n   x cos 2    y sin 2   2 xy sin  cos  (2-12a)

1  cos 2 1  cos 2 sin 2


 x  y  2 xy
2 2 2

x   y x   y
  cos 2   xy sin 2 (2-12b)
2 2

29

p. 76
2-9 The Stress Transformation
Equations for Plane Stress
t
+ F  
t nt dA   x dA cos sin    y dA sin  cos 
  xy dA cos  cos    yx dA sin sin   0
n

  yx   xy


 nt   x   y sin  cos    xy cos 2   sin 2  
x   y
 nt   sin 2   xy cos 2 (2-13b)
2

x   y x   y
n   cos 2   xy sin 2 (2-12b)
2 2

For Plane stress


30

15
p. 76

Comparison
2-6 Stresses on an Inclined Plane in 2-8 Plane Stresses
an Axially Loaded Member
x   y x   y
n 
P
1  cos 2  (2-7) n   cos 2   xy sin 2
2A 2 2
P
  x ;  y  0;  xy  0
x x
n   cos 2
A 2 2
P  x  y
n  sin 2 (2-8)  nt   sin 2   xy cos 2
2A 2
x
 nt   sin 2
2
y

31

p. 76

Remarks
Positive in the positive direction of the j-axis
Sign conventions:
 positive stresses ij or (i)(j), and + CCW from +x-axis

Positive in the negative direction of the j-axis

 n, t, z) axes have the same order as the (x,y,z) axes.


Both are right-hand coordinate system.

32

16
p. 77

Example Problem 2-8 (I)


Given:  x  80 M Pa
 y  100 M Pa
 xy  60 M Pa

Find: n and nt on plane AB = ?


n and nt on plane CD = ?

33

Example Problem 2-8 (II)


 x  80 M Pa

 y  100 M Pa

 xy  60 M Pa

On plane
AB
 n   x cos 2    y sin 2   2 xy sin  cos 

 80 cos 2  42   100 sin 2  42  2 60 sin 42 cos 42

 60.26 MPa  60.3 MPa (C)

 nt   x   y sin  cos    xy cos 2   sin 2 

 80   100sin 42 cos 42   60cos 2  42  sin 2  42

 95.78 MPa  95.8 MPa

34

17
Example Problem 2-8 (III)
 x  80 M Pa

 y  100 M Pa

 xy  60 M Pa

  48
On plane CD
 n   x cos 2    y sin 2   2 xy sin  cos 

 80 cos 2  48   100 sin 2  48  2 60 sin 48 cos 48

 40.26 MPa  40.3 MPa (T)

 nt   x   y sin  cos    xy cos 2   sin 2 

 80   100sin 48 cos 48   60cos 2  48  sin 2  48

 95.78 MPa  95.8 MPa


35

p. 79

Example Problem 2-9


thin-walled pressure vessel

Given: x = 4000 psi,


y = 8000 psi

Find : stresses on plane b-b

36

18
p. 79

Example Problem 2-9


From Eqs. (2-12a) and (2-13a),
 n   x cos 2    y sin 2   2 xy sin  cos 

 4000  cos 2 (53.13)  8000  sin 2 (53.13)  0

 3680 psi (T)

nt  ( x   y ) sin  cos    xy (cos 2   sin 2 )

 (4000  800)  sin(53.13)  cos(53.13)  0

 5760 psi (C)

37

p. 85
2-10 Principal Stresses and Maximum
Shearing Stress – Plane Stress

 Max. n and nt (magnitude)


can be obtained by plotting
curves.
It’s time consuming and
inefficient
max. n

max. nt

38

19
p. 86

Principal Stresses (I)

x   y x   y
n   cos 2   xy sin 2
2 2
maximize n
d n
  x   y sin 2  2 xy cos 2  0
d
2 xy
tan 2 p   p1 ,  p 2 (p1 = p2 +90o)
x   y
principal directions
(principal planes)

39

p. 87
2 xy
tan 2 p 
x   y
Principal Stresses (II)
x   y
 xy
sin 2 p   cos 2 p   2
 x   y
2
  x   y 
2
    2xy     2xy
 2   2 
 x  y
substitute into  nt   sin 2   xy cos 2
2

nt (p) = 0 !!
(Principal planes: Planes free of shear stress )
x  y  x  y
substitute into  n   cos 2   xy sin 2
2 2 Two principal stresses
x  y   x  y 
2

 p1, p 2       xy
2
p1 + p2 = x + y
2  2 
40

20
p. 88

Maximum Shearing Stress (I)


x   y
 nt   sin 2   xy cos 2
2
maximize  nt

d nt
  x   y cos 2  2 xy sin 2  0
d
tan 2  tan 2 p
x   y
tan 2     x  y 2 xy
2 xy  
2 xy  x  y
1 ,  2  1
t1 and 2 are 90o apart) p and  are 45o apart)
41

p. 88

Maximum Shearing Stress (II)


 x  y
 xy
sin 2   2 , cos 2   
 x   y
2
  x  y  
2

    xy
2
    2xy
 2   2 

 x  y t1 and 2 are 90o apart)


 nt  
2
sin 2   xy cos 2     90
  x  y 
2 Two maximum shearing
 max      xy
2
stresses with opposite sign.
 2 
x  y   x  y 
2

(  p1, p 2       xy ) max (or p ): maximum in-plane


2

2  2 
shearing stress
 p1   p 2
 max  ( p ) 
42
2

21
p. 88
d n
   x   y  sin 2  2 xy cos 2 ( 0 for  max )
d   y
Remarks (I)  nt   x
2
sin 2   xy cos 2

d n
    x   y  sin 2  2 xy cos 2  2 nt
d
On principal planes, nt = 0
(or nt (p) = 0 !!)
2 xy 2 p 2
 tan 2 p  2 p1
x   y
 p 2   p1  90

Principal planes are orthogonal.


 For plane stress problems, p3 = z = 0
x  y   x  y 
2

(  p1, p 2       xy )
p1 + p2 = x + y
2
 2  2 
The sum of two normal stresses on two orthogonal planes are invariant.
43

pp. 88

Remarks (II)
 tan 2 p  0 0   p  45 p along zaxis

tan 2 p  0  45   p  0 p along zaxis

 Numerically greater p will act on the plane that makes an


angle of 45 or less with the plane of the numerically larger
of x and y
2 xy x   y
 tan 2 p  tan 2   (Reciprocal relationship)
x   y 2 xy
x  y   x  y 
2

   p  45 (  p1, p 2       xy )
2

2  2 
 p1   p 2  x   y  p1   p 2
 On  ,  max  , n  
2 2 2
44

22
p. 89

Remarks (III)

 3D case:
 There are 3 orthogonal planes on which nt = 0

principal planes

 max   min
  max 
2

acts on planes that bisect the angles between the planes


of max and min (see next page)

45

p. 89

Remarks (IV)
 For plane stress:
p3
max. n : p1 , p2 , 0

max. nt :  p1   p 2 ,  p1  0 ,  p 2  0
2 2 2

46

23
p. 90

Example Problem 2-11

Given: Find:
 p , max =?

 p ,  = ?

 Show the stresses on a sketch.

x = + 10,000 psi
y =  8000 psi
xy =  4000 psi

47

p. 90

Example Problem 2-11


x   y    y 
2

 p1, p 2    x   2xy (2-15)


2  2 

10000   8000  10000   8000 


2

      4000
2

2  2 
 1000  9849

 p1  1000  9849  10,849 psi  10,850 psi (T)


 p 2  1000  9849  8849 psi  8850 psi (C) #


 p3   z  0 #
max  min 10,849   8849
max    9849 psi  9850 psi #
2 2
48

24
p. 91

Example Problem 2-11


2 xy 2  4000 
tan 2 p    0.4444
 x  y 10000   8000 
2 p  23.96,  156.04
 p  11.98,  78.02 #

  p  11.98
 n   x cos 2    y sin 2   2 xy sin  cos 
 10000 cos 2  11.98   8000  sin 2  11.98
 2 4000  sin 11.98 cos  11.98
  p1  10 ,849 psi  10,850 psi (T)
  p  78.02
n  10000 cos 2 78.02   8000sin 2 78.02
 2 4000sin 78.02cos78.02
  p 2  8849 psi  8850 psi (C)
49

p. 92

Example Problem 2-11


the max. in-plane shear stress

   11.98  45  33.02


.
 n   x cos 2    y sin 2   2 xy sin cos 

 n  999.6 psi  1000 psi (T)


nt   x   y sin  cos    xy cos 2   sin 2  
 10000   8000sin 33.02 cos 33.02

  4000 cos 2 33.02  sin 2 33.02 
 9849 psi  9850 psi

x  y  
( On  ,  n  ; max  max min )
2 2
50

25
p. 93

Example Problem 2-11

51

p. 93

Example Problem 2-12


Given: Find:
 p , max =?

 p ,  = ?

 Show the stresses on a sketch.

x = +100 MPa
y = 80 MPa
xy = 40 MPa

52

26
p. 93

Example Problem 2-12


x   y    y 
2

 p1, p 2    x   2xy (2-15)


2  2 

100  80  100  80 
2

      40
2

2  2 
 90  41.23

 p1  90  41.23  131.23 M Pa  131.2 M Pa (T)  p1   p 2  0

 p 2  90  41.23  48.77 M Pa  48.8 M Pa (T)


 p3   z  0

max  min 131.23  0


max    65.61 MPa  65.6 MPa (2-19)
2 2

53

p. 94

Example Problem 2-12


2 xy 2  40 
tan 2 p    0.4000 (2-14)
 x  y 100  80
2 p  75.96,  104.04
 p  37.98,  52.02

  p  37.98

n   x cos 2    y sin 2   2 xy sin  cos  (2-12a)

 100 cos 2  37.98  80 sin 2  37.98  2 40sin  37.98cos 37.98


  p1  131.23 MPa  131.2 MPa (T)
  p  52.02

n  100 cos 2  52.02  80 sin 2  52.02  2 40sin  52.02cos 52.02


  p 2  48.77 MPa  48.8 MPa (T)
54

27
p. 94

Example Problem 2-12

p3= 0 Note:
In xy-plane,
p = (p1  p2/2
= (131.2-48.8)/2
= 41.2 MPa
acting on = 38+45 

p < max= 65.6 MPa

55

p. 98

2-11 Mohr’s Circle for Plane Stress


Otto Mohr (German engineer, 1835-1918) A = 2p
cos(A-B) = cos(A) cos(B) + sin(A) sin(B) B = 2
x   y x   y
n 
2

2

cos 2   xy sin 2   a v g  R c o s 2  p  2  
   x   y
 nt   sinx 2 y sin 2  xy
2 2
2  cos
xy cos 2  R sin 2  p  2   
square sum sin(-B+A)
sin(A+B) = sin(A)cos(B)
sin(-B)cos(A)++cos(A)sin(B)
cos(-B)sin(A)
x   y    
2 2
  
 n    2nt   x y
  2xy
 2   2  R=
   y 
Circle : center  n ,  nt    x , 0    av g , 0 
 2  2 p2
2 p1
radius    y 
2

R   x    2xy
 2 
56

28
p. 99

2-11 Mohr’s Circle for Plane Stress


Shear stress tends to rotate the element clockwise
a ssu m e  x   y  0

C :  a v g , 0 

   y
2

R   x    2xy
 2 

Shear stress tends to rotate the element counterclockwise


57

p. 100

2-11 Mohr’s Circle for Plane Stress


OF '  OC  CF cos2 p  2
  x   y  2  avg  VV '   xy
OF '  OC  CV cos 2 p cos 2  CV sin 2 p sin 2
 CV '   x   y  2

x  y  x  y
OF '   cos 2   xy sin 2   n
2 2

F ' F  CF sin  2 p  2 
 CV sin 2 p cos 2  CV cos 2 p sin 2
 V 'V cos 2  CV 'sin 2
 x  y
  xy cos 2  sin 2   nt
2
58

29
p. 100

2-11 Mohr’s Circle for Plane Stress


 n   avg  R cos  2 p  2 
Point F
 nt  R sin  2 p  2 

  = 0°
 n   av g  R cos 2  p   x Point V
 nt  R sin 2  p   xy

  = 90°
 n   av g  R cos 2  p   y
Point H
 nt   R sin 2  p    xy

59

p. 100

2-11 Mohr’s Circle for Plane Stress


max. normal stress:
 p1  avg  R cos(2 p  2 p )
 avg  R
nt   R sin(2 p  2 p )  0

 p 2  avg  R cos(2 p  2 p  180)


 avg  R
nt   R sin(2 p  2 p  180)  0

max. in-plane shearing stress

 p  R sin(2 p  2 p  90)   R

60

30
p. 101

Procedure for Drawing Mohr’s Circle


 Choose a set of x-y axes.
 Identify x, y , and xy with proper
sign. 
Draw a set of  axes.
Shear stress tends to rotate the element clockwise


H(y , yx)
 Plot points V(x , xy) and H(y , yx).
(n , nt)
 Draw line VH and determine the
center C and radius R. C

2
 Draw the circle. R
 Use CV as the x-axis ( = 0º) or the
V(x , xy)
reference line for angle measurement. 
Shear stress tends to rotate the element counterclockwise
61

p. 102

Example Problem 2-13


 p  ? max  ?  p  ?
 aa  ? aa  ?

H(6, 4)

E(7.06, 0) D(9.06, 0)
C(1,0)
OC  ( x   y ) 2  (8  6) 2  1
V(8,4)

 x  y
2

CV      2xy  7 2  4 2  8.062 ksi
 2 
 p1  OD  OC  CV  1  8.062  9.06 ksi

 p 2  OE  CE  CV  1188.062
.062 =97.06
.06 ksiksi
 p3   z  0
62

31
p. 103

Example Problem 2-13

 p   max  CA  CB  8.06 ksi

 n  OC  1.000 psi

2 p  tan 1 4 7   29.74 E(7.06, 0) D(9.06, 0)

 p  14.87

63

p. 104

Example Problem 2-13

At plane a-a, 45º from V(8, 4),


90º CCW from CV, i.e., F(5, 7)

64

32
p. 104

Example Problem 2-14

 p1  OD  54  30  84.0 MPa (T) 


 p 2  OE  54  30  24.0 MPa (T)
 p3   z  0
tan 2 p  -24 / 18  -1.3333
 p  -26.57?  26.57 

65

p. 105

Example Problem 2-14


Note: p1 > p2 > p3 = 0

 p1  0
 max   42 MPa
2
 p1   p 2
 p 
2

stresses of elements rotating


 p3  p2 about the p2axis
 p1

stresses of elements rotating


about the p3axis (zaxis)

stresses of elements rotating



about the p1axis
66

33
p. 105

Example Problem 2-14


(24, 0)
(84, 0)
(42, 0)


67

p. 76

Remarks for sign of shear stresses


Sign conventions: Positive in the positive direction of the j-axis
 positive stresses ij or (i)(j)
stress direction

 xy Positive in the negative direction of the j-axis

outward normal t

n
 + CCW from +x-axis

 n, t, z) axes have the same order as the (x,y,z) axes.


Both are right-hand coordinate system.

68

34
Remarks for sign of shear stresses

 yx   xy  yx  xy


       90


H(y , yx)
(n , nt)

C

2
R

 V(x , xy)
Shear stress tends to rotate the element counterclockwise
69

Sign of shear stresses for 131.2


48.8
MPa
Example Problem 2-12 MPa
65.6
MPa 48.8
65.6 MPa
MPa

131.2
 MPa

H(ave , yx) (n , nt)

C 2 
48.8 0 , 0 131.2 , 0
131.2 MPa R
MPa
V(ave , xy)

65.6 
MPa
70

35
p. 108

2-12 General State of Stress at a Point

1
V  dn dA
3
1 1 1
 dx dAx  dy dAy  dz dAz
3 3 3

dn  dx cos x  dy cos  y  dz cos z

dAz
dn dAx  dA cos  x  dA l
dAx
dAy  dA cos  y  dA m
dA
dAy dAz  dA cos  z  dA n

l, m, n: direction cosines

71

p. 109
2-12 General State of Stress at a
Point
Force equilibrium
Fx  S x dA   x dA l   yx dA m   zxdA n
Fy  S y dA   xy dA l   y dA m   zy dA n
Fz  S z dA   xz dA l   yz dA m   z dA n

S x   xl   yx m   zxn
S y   xy l   y m   zy n
S z   xz l   yz m   z n

 n  S xl  S y m  S z n

  x l 2   y m 2   z n 2  2  xy lm  2  yz mn  2  zx nl

 n t   S 2   2n

72

36
8 Exercises

2-41, 2-54, 2-61, 2-81,


2-84, 2-93, 2-96, 2-119

73

Appendix

Greek alphabet
Upper case Lower case Name Upper case Lower case Name
A a alpha N n nu
B b beta   xi /ksi/ or
/zai/
  gamma O o omicron
 d delta P  pi
E e epsilon R r rho
Z z zeta S  sigma
H h eta T  tau
Q  theta U u upsilon
I i iota F f phi /fai/
K k kappa C c chi /kai/
L l lambda Y y psi /sai/
M m mu W w omega

74

37

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