Materials Flashcards

1
Q

When a material is deformed what happens?

A

work is done, transferred into the material and stored as elastic potential energy

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2
Q

What is the area under a force extension graph?

A

elastic potential energy

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3
Q

What happens if plastic deformation occurs?

A

work done is not stored as elastic potential it is instead used to rearrange atoms into deformation

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4
Q

What is Hooke’s Law?

A

for a material within its elastic limit, the tensile/ compressive force applied is directly proportional to the extension of the springs or wires

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5
Q

When does Hooke’s stop applying?

A

when elastic limit is reached

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6
Q

What is force constant?

A

measure of stiffness within elastic limit

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7
Q

In which way do the tensile forces act?

A

away from the centre of the spring in both directions

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8
Q

What do tensile forces cause?

A

extension

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9
Q

What do the forces acting towards the centre of the spring cause?

A

compression

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10
Q

What does the application of force on a metal wire cause?

A

permanent extension past elastic limit

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11
Q

What does the application of force on a rubber band cause?

A

hysteresis loop- energy lost to stretch material

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12
Q

What does the application of force on a polymer cause?

A

plastic deformation- easily changes shape

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13
Q

How do you test the force constant of springs, rubber bands and polyethene?

A

suspend material and measure original length then attach mass and measure extension

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14
Q

How do you reduce the errors within the force constant practical?

A

read levels at eye level and using a set square to make sure the ruler is straight

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15
Q

How do you calculate the spring constant of springs in series?

A

(1/k1) + (1/k2) + (1/k3)

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16
Q

How do you calculate the spring constant of springs in parallel?

A

(k1) + (k2) + (k3)

17
Q

What is the definition of tensile stress?

A

force applied to a material per unit cross sectional area (force/area)

18
Q

What is the definition of tensile strain?

A

extension or compression of a material per unit of its original length (extension/original length)

19
Q

What is the definition of Young Modulus?

A

ratio of stress to strain and measure of stiffness (stress/strain)

20
Q

How do you determine Young Modulus?

A
  • apply various forces to wire to measure extension
  • measure diameter with micrometer and calculate area
  • clamp wire and suspend taught over pulley measuring extension with a ruler
21
Q

What deformation occurs when a brittle material is stretched?

A

no plastic deformation just breakage

22
Q

What deformation occurs when an elastic material is stretched?

A

no plastic deformation, just energy used

23
Q

What deformation occurs when a ductile material is stretched?

A

elastic deformation until limit of proportionality and then reaches UTS and breaking point

24
Q

Define ultimate tensile strength:

A

maximum stress applied to a material before it breaks