Physics, asked by meham651, 1 year ago

a very wide plate is loaded in tension on one side and held in place by a rivet on the other as shown below"

Answers

Answered by shivanshusingh97
0

Simple Stresses

Simple stresses are expressed as the ratio of the applied force divided by the resisting

area or

σ = Force / Area.

It is the expression of force per unit area to structural members that are subjected to

external forces and/or induced forces. Stress is the lead to accurately describe and

predict the elastic deformation of a body.

Simple stress can be classified as normal stress, shear stress, and bearing stress.

Normal stress develops when a force is applied perpendicular to the cross-sectional

area of the material. If the force is going to pull the material, the stress is said to be

tensile stress and compressive stress develops when the material is being

compressed by two opposing forces. Shear stress is developed if the applied force is

parallel to the resisting area. Example is the bolt that holds the tension rod in its

anchor. Another condition of shearing is when we twist a bar along its longitudinal axis.

This type of shearing is called torsion and covered in Chapter 3. Another type of simple

stress is the bearing stress, it is the contact pressure between two bodies.

Suspension bridges are good example of structures that carry these stresses. The

weight of the vehicle is carried by the bridge deck and passes the force to the stringers

(vertical cables), which in turn, supported by the main suspension cables. The

suspension cables then transferred the force into bridge towers.

Normal Stress

Stress

Stress is the expression of force applied to a unit area of surface. It is measured in psi

(English unit) or in MPa (SI unit). Another unit of stress which is not commonly used is

the dynes (cgs unit). Stress is the ratio of force over area.

stress = force / area

Simple Stresses

There are three types of simple stress namely; normal stress, shearing stress, and

bearing stress.

Normal Stress

The resisting area is perpendicular to the applied force, thus normal. There are two

types of normal stresses; tensile stress and compressive stress. Tensile stress applied

to bar tends the bar to elongate while compressive stress tend to shorten the bar.

where P is the applied normal load in Newton and A is the area in mm

2

. The maximum

stress in tension or compression occurs over a section normal to the load.

SOLVED PROBLEMS IN NORMAL STRESS

Problem 104

A hollow steel tube with an inside diameter of 100

mm must carry a tensile load of 400 kN. Determine

the outside diameter of the tube if the stress is limited

to 120 MN/m

2

.

Similar questions