Mechanical MetallurgyI Mechanical Fundamentals 1 Introduction 2 Stress and Strain Relationships for Elastic Behavior 3 Elements of the Theory of Plasticity II Metallurgical Fundamentals 4 Plastic Deformation of Single Crystals 5 Dislocation Theory 6 Strengthening Mechanisms 7 Fracture III Applications to Materials Testing 8 The Tension Test 9 The Hardness Test 10 The Torsion Test 11 Fracture Mechanics 12 Fatigue of Metals 13 Creep and Stress Rupture 14 Brittle Fracture and Impact Testing IV Plastic Forming of Metals 15 Fundamentals of Metalworking 16 Forging 17 Rolling of Metals 18 Extrusion 19 Drawing of Rods, Wires and Tubes 20 Sheet-Metal Forming 21 Maching of Metals Appendixes |
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Page 14
... defined as the ratio of the change in length to the original length of the same dimension . δ e = Lo = AL L - Lo Lo = Lo where e = average linear strain 8 = deformation By analogy with the definition of stress at a point , the strain at ...
... defined as the ratio of the change in length to the original length of the same dimension . δ e = Lo = AL L - Lo Lo = Lo where e = average linear strain 8 = deformation By analogy with the definition of stress at a point , the strain at ...
Page 42
... definition of shear strain , Y ,, = 28 ,,, is called the engineering shear strain . Yxy = ди ay + av ax Yxz = θω ax ди + ... defined by Eq . ( 2-42 ) . Since the strain tensor is a second - rank tensor , it has all of the properties that ...
... definition of shear strain , Y ,, = 28 ,,, is called the engineering shear strain . Yxy = ди ay + av ax Yxz = θω ax ди + ... defined by Eq . ( 2-42 ) . Since the strain tensor is a second - rank tensor , it has all of the properties that ...
Page 459
... defined as the stress at a given temperature which produces a steady - state creep rate1 of a fixed amount , usually taken as 0.00001 or 0.001 percent per hour . Alternatively , the creep strength may be defined as the stress to cause a ...
... defined as the stress at a given temperature which produces a steady - state creep rate1 of a fixed amount , usually taken as 0.00001 or 0.001 percent per hour . Alternatively , the creep strength may be defined as the stress to cause a ...
Contents
Introduction | 3 |
Stress and Strain Relationships for Elastic Behavior | 18 |
Metallurgical Fundamentals | 101 |
Copyright | |
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alloy aluminum angle annealed ASME ASTM atoms axis behavior billet brittle fracture Burgers vector cold-worked components compression constant crack creep cycles decrease determined diameter direction dislocation line ductile edge dislocation elastic elongation embrittlement energy engineering equation extrusion factor failure fatigue limit fibers Figure flow curve flow stress force forging friction given grain boundaries hot-working hydrostatic increase indentation lattice length load machining martensite material matrix maximum measured mechanical metallurgical Metals Park modulus necking notch occurs particles percent plane-strain plastic deformation plastic strain pressure produce properties ratio recrystallization reduction region residual stresses rolling screw dislocation shear stress sheet shown in Fig slip plane slip systems Society for Metals specimen steel strain hardening strain rate stress-strain curve structure surface temperature tensile strength tensile stress tension test tensor thickness tool torsion Trans usually velocity workpiece yield strength yield stress