This MCQ module is based on: Stress Strain Hookes Law
Stress Strain Hookes Law
This assessment will be based on: Stress Strain Hookes Law
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Stress Strain Hookes Law
8.1 Introduction: Elastic and Plastic Bodies
In earlier chapters we treated objects as rigid bodies — objects whose shape and size remain unchanged when forces act on them. In practice, every real body deforms when an external force is applied. The study of how materials respond to forces and deformations is the subject of this chapter.
When you stretch a rubber band and release it, it returns to its original shape. When you press a lump of clay, it stays deformed. These two contrasting behaviours define the two fundamental categories of material response:
No material is perfectly elastic or perfectly plastic. Steel is highly elastic (not perfectly), while putty is nearly plastic. Even a rubber ball, though elastic, shows slight permanent deformation after repeated use.
8.2 Stress and Strain
Stress
When an external force is applied to a body, the body gets deformed. Internal restoring forces develop within the body that oppose the deformation. At equilibrium, the restoring force equals the applied force in magnitude.
Stress depends on both the magnitude of the force and the area over which it acts. A small force on a thin wire produces greater stress than the same force on a thick rod.
Types of Stress
| Type | Description | Force Direction |
|---|---|---|
| Tensile Stress | Developed when a body is stretched (elongated) by two equal and opposite forces | Perpendicular to cross-section, pulling outward |
| Compressive Stress | Developed when a body is compressed by two equal and opposite forces pushing inward | Perpendicular to cross-section, pushing inward |
| Shearing (Tangential) Stress | Developed when a tangential force acts parallel to the surface of the body | Parallel to the cross-section |
Strain
| Type of Strain | Formula | Associated Stress |
|---|---|---|
| Longitudinal (Linear) Strain | \(\displaystyle\frac{\Delta L}{L}\) | Tensile or Compressive |
| Volumetric Strain | \(\displaystyle\frac{\Delta V}{V}\) | Hydraulic (all-round pressure) |
| Shearing Strain | \(\displaystyle\frac{\Delta x}{L} = \tan\theta \approx \theta\) (for small θ) | Shearing Stress |
8.3 Hooke's Law
In 1676, Robert Hooke discovered that for most solid materials, stress and strain are directly proportional to each other within a certain limit called the elastic limit.
Stress-Strain Curve
A stress-strain curve is obtained by gradually increasing the load on a test specimen (typically a metallic wire) and plotting the resulting stress against strain. The curve reveals several important features of material behaviour:
Interactive: Stress-Strain Curve Explorer L2 Understand
Hover over each region of the curve below to learn about the material behaviour in that zone.
Ductile vs Brittle Materials
Ductile materials (like copper, aluminium, mild steel) exhibit a large plastic region before fracture. They can be drawn into wires. The stress-strain curve shows a significant gap between the yield point and the fracture point.
Brittle materials (like cast iron, glass, ceramics) fracture soon after the elastic limit with little or no plastic deformation. Their stress-strain curves show almost no plastic region.
Worked Examples
Example 1: Calculating Tensile Stress
A steel wire of cross-sectional area \(3.0 \times 10^{-5}\) m² is subjected to a tensile force of 600 N. Calculate the tensile stress developed in the wire.
Formula: \(\text{Stress} = \frac{F}{A}\)
Calculation: \[\text{Stress} = \frac{600}{3.0 \times 10^{-5}} = 2.0 \times 10^{7} \text{ Pa} = 20 \text{ MPa}\] Dimensional check: \(\frac{[\text{N}]}{[\text{m}^2]} = \frac{[\text{kg}\cdot\text{m/s}^2]}{[\text{m}^2]} = [\text{kg}\cdot\text{m}^{-1}\cdot\text{s}^{-2}] = [\text{Pa}]\) ✓
Answer: The tensile stress is \(\boxed{2.0 \times 10^{7} \text{ Pa}}\) or 20 MPa.
Example 2: Longitudinal Strain in a Rod
A copper rod of length 2.5 m is stretched by 0.5 mm under a tensile load. Calculate the longitudinal strain.
Formula: \(\text{Longitudinal Strain} = \frac{\Delta L}{L}\)
Calculation: \[\text{Strain} = \frac{5 \times 10^{-4}}{2.5} = 2.0 \times 10^{-4}\] Note: Strain is dimensionless — no unit.
Answer: The longitudinal strain is \(\boxed{2.0 \times 10^{-4}}\).
Example 3: Stress and Modulus of Elasticity
A wire of length 1.5 m and diameter 0.60 mm is stretched by 0.30 mm when a load of 8.0 kg is suspended from it. Calculate: (a) the stress, (b) the strain, and (c) the modulus of elasticity of the wire material. Take \(g = 9.8\) m/s².
Length: \(L = 1.5\) m
Diameter: \(d = 0.60\) mm \(= 6.0 \times 10^{-4}\) m, so radius \(r = 3.0 \times 10^{-4}\) m
Extension: \(\Delta L = 0.30\) mm \(= 3.0 \times 10^{-4}\) m
Mass: \(m = 8.0\) kg
(a) Stress:
Force: \(F = mg = 8.0 \times 9.8 = 78.4\) N
Cross-sectional area: \(A = \pi r^2 = \pi \times (3.0 \times 10^{-4})^2 = \pi \times 9.0 \times 10^{-8} = 2.827 \times 10^{-7}\) m²
\[\text{Stress} = \frac{F}{A} = \frac{78.4}{2.827 \times 10^{-7}} = 2.77 \times 10^{8} \text{ Pa} \approx 277 \text{ MPa}\] (b) Strain: \[\text{Strain} = \frac{\Delta L}{L} = \frac{3.0 \times 10^{-4}}{1.5} = 2.0 \times 10^{-4}\] (c) Modulus of Elasticity: \[E = \frac{\text{Stress}}{\text{Strain}} = \frac{2.77 \times 10^{8}}{2.0 \times 10^{-4}} = 1.39 \times 10^{12} \text{ Pa} \approx 1.39 \text{ TPa}\] Dimensional check: \(E\) has the same dimensions as stress: \([ML^{-1}T^{-2}]\) ✓
Answers: (a) Stress = \(\boxed{2.77 \times 10^8 \text{ Pa}}\), (b) Strain = \(\boxed{2.0 \times 10^{-4}}\), (c) \(E = \boxed{1.39 \times 10^{12} \text{ Pa}}\)
Example 4: Shearing Strain
A metallic cube of side 5.0 cm has its upper face displaced by 0.020 cm relative to the lower fixed face when a tangential force is applied. Calculate the shearing strain and the angle of shear.
Shearing strain: \[\text{Shearing strain} = \frac{\Delta x}{L} = \frac{2.0 \times 10^{-4}}{0.050} = 4.0 \times 10^{-3}\] Angle of shear: \[\theta = \tan^{-1}\left(\frac{\Delta x}{L}\right) \approx \frac{\Delta x}{L} = 4.0 \times 10^{-3} \text{ rad}\] (Since the strain is very small, \(\tan\theta \approx \theta\))
Converting to degrees: \(\theta = 4.0 \times 10^{-3} \times \frac{180}{\pi} \approx 0.23°\)
Answer: Shearing strain = \(\boxed{4.0 \times 10^{-3}}\), Angle of shear \(\approx 0.23°\)
- Take a thin rubber band, a steel spring (from a pen), and a piece of modelling clay.
- Hang a small weight (say 100 g) from each and measure the extension.
- Remove the weight and observe whether each returns to its original length.
- Record which material showed the most extension and which showed permanent deformation.
The rubber band stretches the most but returns to its original length (elastic). The steel spring stretches very little but also returns perfectly (elastic with high modulus). The clay stretches and stays deformed (plastic).
Conclusion: Steel has the highest elastic modulus (stiffest), rubber has the lowest (most compliant), and clay is plastic. Elasticity is not about how much something stretches — it is about whether it returns to its original shape. Steel is more elastic than rubber in the physics sense because it recovers its shape more perfectly.
Competency-Based Questions
Q1. L1 Remember What is the SI unit of stress?
Q2. L3 Apply Calculate the stress in the wire under the 50 N load. (2 marks)
Diameter \(d = 1.0\) mm \(= 1.0 \times 10^{-3}\) m, so \(r = 5.0 \times 10^{-4}\) m
\(A = \pi r^2 = \pi \times (5.0 \times 10^{-4})^2 = 7.854 \times 10^{-7}\) m²
\(\text{Stress} = \frac{50}{7.854 \times 10^{-7}} = 6.37 \times 10^{7}\) Pa \(\approx 63.7\) MPa
Q3. L3 Apply Calculate the longitudinal strain and the modulus of elasticity of the alloy. (3 marks)
Strain \(= \frac{\Delta L}{L} = \frac{0.40 \times 10^{-3}}{2.0} = 2.0 \times 10^{-4}\)
\(E = \frac{\text{Stress}}{\text{Strain}} = \frac{6.37 \times 10^{7}}{2.0 \times 10^{-4}} = 3.18 \times 10^{11}\) Pa \(\approx 318\) GPa
Q4. L4 Analyse Identify the elastic limit and the breaking stress of the wire. Is this material ductile or brittle? Justify your answer. (3 marks)
The elastic limit corresponds to the load at which permanent deformation begins = 200 N.
Elastic limit stress \(= \frac{200}{7.854 \times 10^{-7}} = 2.55 \times 10^{8}\) Pa \(\approx 255\) MPa.
Breaking stress \(= \frac{350}{7.854 \times 10^{-7}} = 4.46 \times 10^{8}\) Pa \(\approx 446\) MPa.
The wire is ductile because there is a significant difference between the elastic limit (200 N) and breaking point (350 N), meaning the material undergoes substantial plastic deformation before fracture.
Q5. L5 Evaluate The engineer claims this alloy is suitable for suspension bridge cables that must support a maximum load of 100 N per wire without permanent deformation. Evaluate this claim. (2 marks)
The elastic limit of the wire is at 200 N. Since the maximum working load is 100 N (which is half the elastic limit), the wire operates well within its elastic region with a safety factor of 2. The claim is valid — the wire will not undergo permanent deformation under 100 N. However, for critical applications like bridges, a safety factor of at least 3-5 is typically recommended, so a more thorough evaluation would be needed.
Assertion-Reason Questions
Assertion (A): Steel is more elastic than rubber.
Reason (R): Steel has a much larger Young's modulus than rubber, meaning it deforms far less for the same applied stress.
Assertion (A): Strain is a dimensionless quantity.
Reason (R): Strain is the ratio of two quantities having the same dimensions (change in dimension / original dimension).
Assertion (A): The stress-strain curve for rubber does not have a well-defined straight-line (linear) region.
Reason (R): Rubber does not obey Hooke's law.