Materials Flashcards

1
Q

Stress

A

F/A

Force per unit area of the plane on which loading is applied

Intensity of loading

Used for

Tension
Compression
Shear

Bending is a combination of these stresses

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2
Q

Plastics are viscoelastic, meaning that

A

their physical characteristics are modified by the rate of strain applied

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3
Q

Stress vs. Strain Curve, testing

A

Continuously increasing tensile force applied to standard specimen until it breaks

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4
Q

Elastic Deformation

A

Behave in proportional stress/strain manner

If force discontinued, specimen will relax to original length

Deformation is temporary

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5
Q

If force continues to rise, one of two events will occur

A

Specimen will fracture (brittle failure)

Specimen will permanently deform (ductile failure) and ultimately fracture

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6
Q

Stiffness

A

Relationship between stress and strain

Material that is stiff demands high stress levels to produce small amounts of strain, will have a steep stress/strain slope, high Young’s modulus

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7
Q

Slope of elastic region in stress/strain curve

A

Young’s Modulus

Measure of stiffness (not a measure of strength)

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8
Q

Strength

A

Measure of stress at which material fails for a single cycle test

Strength is the stress at fracture point

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9
Q

Yield Point

A

Point at which elastic deformation stops and plastic deformation begins

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10
Q

Plastic Deformation

A

Increments of stress beyond a critical level produce increasing amounts of permanent strain

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11
Q

Ductile material

A

One which undergoes plastic deformation before failure

A ductile material has a large range of plastic deformation before fracture

larger area under stress strain graph indicates it requires more energy to cause catastrophic failure

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12
Q

If material were undergoing plastic deformation, and load was removed

A
  • it would unload in a line parallel to the elastic portion of the graph
  • the amount of permanent deformation would be the resultant strain at the point where the unloading line crosses the strain axis of the graph
  • Materials that exhibit this behavior are said to be ductile
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13
Q

Mechanical Work

A

o Force applied to the body multiplied by distance (or deformation) that occurs under the influence of load

o Work required to bring about fracture in a material is the area under a stress-strain graph

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14
Q

Toughness

A

Material’s ability to withstand impact loading

Ductile materials generally more tough, as they deform in plastic manner before catastrophic failure (as opposed to brittle materials which just fracture at a certain stress)

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15
Q

Main factors in Material Selection

A

Ultimate strength (tensile)

Yield strength (usually tensile)

Young’s Modulus

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16
Q

Steel vs. Aluminum Alloy

A

Steel is stronger and stiffer

  • better for heavy/vigorous individuals
  • larger energy to failure
  • however heavier

Aluminum is lower density (lighter)

  • preferable for lower limb orthotics because of weight
  • possible to use larger aluminum alloy section to compensate for lower strength, and still be lighter than steel
17
Q

Heat treatment

A

o High carbon steels made harder by cooling them rapidly under water
• Stronger, but renders them very brittle
• Unsuitable for orthotic applications

o Compromise between hard brittle and soft ductile can be achieved by different types of heat treatment

18
Q

Visco Elastic Behavior

A

o When material is strained to a particular level and held at that level, stress produced within material will gradually diminish with time
• Material’s ability to resist force diminishes the longer strain level is maintained
• At the end of the day, plastic AFO is less effective than it was at the beginning
o Difficult to make comparisons of their physical properties
o Strain rate highly variable in nature
o Ambient temperature also causes significant variations in performance of plastic materials
• Yield strength of poly propylene with temperature
• Yield strength diminishes as much as 50% in range 0-40 degrees Celsius

19
Q

Plastic Advantages over metal

A
  • Molded to cast of patient’s shape
  • Provides more closely fitting device that is quicker and easier to manufacture
  • Some can be molded directly to patient
  • Can be more cosmetic
  • Often lighter
20
Q

Fatigue failure

A

o Repeated loading causes materials to fail at a stress somewhat lower than their strength

  • Effect of cyclic loading is to cause materials to weaken
  • Failure at consequently lower stress level
  • Several factors have bearing on # of cycles of loading necessary to cause fatigue failure
  • Higher level of stress, lower number of cycles to failure
  • Steel will withstand millions of cycles of loading when stress levels are kept to less than half the yield point
  • However when stress levels are close to the yield point, number of cycles to cause failure drops to thousands
21
Q

Stress Raiser

A

• Poor finish in the form of scratches or notches, or sudden changes of section
o All have effect of producing “stress raiser” in material
• Higher stress levels cause failure to commence in stress raised area, causes failure to spread gradually across section
• Accelerated process because as it occurs, cause general stress level to rise as the material section becomes effectively smaller (F/A)
• Smooth finish is of great importance to reduce risk of early structural failure due to fatigue
• Cut marks/notches should be smoothed out before dispensing to patient

22
Q

Brittle Materials

A

Materials that exhibit little or no yielding before failure

23
Q

Ductile Material

A

Material that can be subjected to large strains before it ruptures is called a ductile material