Plane stress
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In
continuum mechanics Continuum mechanics is a branch of mechanics that deals with the mechanical behavior of materials modeled as a continuous mass rather than as discrete particles. The French mathematician Augustin-Louis Cauchy was the first to formulate such mo ...
, a material is said to be under plane stress if the stress vector is zero across a particular plane. When that situation occurs over an entire element of a structure, as is often the case for thin plates, the
stress analysis Stress may refer to: Science and medicine * Stress (biology), an organism's response to a stressor such as an environmental condition * Stress (linguistics), relative emphasis or prominence given to a syllable in a word, or to a word in a phrase ...
is considerably simplified, as the stress state can be represented by a
tensor In mathematics, a tensor is an algebraic object that describes a multilinear relationship between sets of algebraic objects related to a vector space. Tensors may map between different objects such as vectors, scalars, and even other tensor ...
of dimension 2 (representable as a 2×2 matrix rather than 3×3). A related notion, plane strain, is often applicable to very thick members. Plane stress typically occurs in thin flat plates that are acted upon only by load forces that are parallel to them. In certain situations, a gently curved thin plate may also be assumed to have plane stress for the purpose of stress analysis. This is the case, for example, of a thin-walled cylinder filled with a fluid under pressure. In such cases, stress components perpendicular to the plate are negligible compared to those parallel to it. In other situations, however, the bending stress of a thin plate cannot be neglected. One can still simplify the analysis by using a two-dimensional domain, but the plane stress tensor at each point must be complemented with bending terms.


Mathematical definition

Mathematically, the stress at some point in the material is a plane stress if one of the three principal stresses (the
eigenvalues In linear algebra, an eigenvector () or characteristic vector of a linear transformation is a nonzero vector that changes at most by a scalar factor when that linear transformation is applied to it. The corresponding eigenvalue, often denote ...
of the
Cauchy stress tensor In continuum mechanics, the Cauchy stress tensor \boldsymbol\sigma, true stress tensor, or simply called the stress tensor is a second order tensor named after Augustin-Louis Cauchy. The tensor consists of nine components \sigma_ that completely ...
) is zero. That is, there is
Cartesian coordinate system A Cartesian coordinate system (, ) in a plane is a coordinate system that specifies each point uniquely by a pair of numerical coordinates, which are the signed distances to the point from two fixed perpendicular oriented lines, measured in ...
in which the stress tensor has the form : \sigma = \begin \sigma_ & 0 & 0 \\ 0 & \sigma_ & 0 \\ 0 & 0 & 0 \end \equiv \begin \sigma_ & 0 & 0 \\ 0 & \sigma_ & 0 \\ 0 & 0 & 0 \end For example, consider a rectangular block of material measuring 10, 40 and 5 cm along the x, y, and z, that is being stretched in the x direction and compressed in the y direction, by pairs of opposite forces with magnitudes 10 N and 20 N, respectively, uniformly distributed over the corresponding faces. The stress tensor inside the block will be : \sigma = \begin 500\mathrm & 0 & 0 \\ 0 & -4000\mathrm & 0 \\ 0 & 0 & 0 \end More generally, if one chooses the first two coordinate axes arbitrarily but perpendicular to the direction of zero stress, the stress tensor will have the form : \sigma = \begin \sigma_ & \sigma_ & 0 \\ \sigma_ & \sigma_ & 0 \\ 0 & 0 & 0 \end \equiv \begin \sigma_ & \tau_ & 0 \\ \tau_ & \sigma_ & 0 \\ 0 & 0 & 0 \end and can therefore be represented by a 2 × 2 matrix, : \sigma_ = \begin \sigma_ & \sigma_ \\ \sigma_ & \sigma_ \end \equiv \begin \sigma_ & \tau_ \\ \tau_ & \sigma_ \end


Constitutive equations

:''See Hooke's law#Plane_stress''


Plane stress in curved surfaces

In certain cases, the plane stress model can be used in the analysis of gently curved surfaces. For example, consider a thin-walled cylinder subjected to an axial compressive load uniformly distributed along its rim, and filled with a pressurized fluid. The internal pressure will generate a reactive hoop stress on the wall, a normal tensile stress directed perpendicular to the cylinder axis and tangential to its surface. The cylinder can be conceptually unrolled and analyzed as a flat thin rectangular plate subjected to tensile load in one direction and compressive load in another other direction, both parallel to the plate.


Plane strain (strain matrix)

If one dimension is very large compared to the others, the principal strain in the direction of the longest dimension is constrained and can be assumed as constant, that means there will be effectively zero strain along it, hence yielding a plane strain condition (Figure 7.2). In this case, though all principal stresses are non-zero, the principal stress in the direction of the longest dimension can be disregarded for calculations. Thus, allowing a two dimensional analysis of stresses, e.g. a dam analyzed at a cross section loaded by the reservoir. The corresponding strain tensor is: : \varepsilon_ = \begin \varepsilon_ & \varepsilon_ & 0 \\ \varepsilon_ & \varepsilon_ & 0 \\ 0 & 0 & 0 \end\,\! and the corresponding stress tensor is: : \sigma_ = \begin \sigma_ & \sigma_ & 0 \\ \sigma_ & \sigma_ & 0 \\ 0 & 0 & \sigma_ \end\,\! in which the non-zero \sigma_\,\! term arises from the Poisson's effect. However, this term can be temporarily removed from the stress analysis to leave only the in-plane terms, effectively reducing the analysis to two dimensions.


Stress transformation in plane stress and plane strain

Consider a point P\,\! in a continuum under a state of plane stress, or plane strain, with stress components (\sigma_x, \sigma_y, \tau_)\,\! and all other stress components equal to zero (Figure 8.1). From static equilibrium of an infinitesimal material element at P\,\! (Figure 8.2), the normal stress \sigma_\mathrm\,\! and the shear stress \tau_\mathrm\,\! on any plane perpendicular to the x\,\!-y\,\! plane passing through P\,\! with a unit vector \mathbf n\,\! making an angle of \theta\,\! with the horizontal, i.e. \cos \theta\,\! is the direction cosine in the x\,\! direction, is given by: :\sigma_\mathrm = \frac ( \sigma_x + \sigma_y ) + \frac ( \sigma_x - \sigma_y )\cos 2\theta + \tau_ \sin 2\theta\,\! :\tau_\mathrm = -\frac(\sigma_x - \sigma_y )\sin 2\theta + \tau_\cos 2\theta \,\! These equations indicate that in a plane stress or plane strain condition, one can determine the stress components at a point on all directions, i.e. as a function of \theta\,\!, if one knows the stress components (\sigma_x, \sigma_y, \tau_)\,\! on any two perpendicular directions at that point. It is important to remember that we are considering a unit area of the infinitesimal element in the direction parallel to the y\,\!-z\,\! plane. The principal directions (Figure 8.3), i.e., orientation of the planes where the shear stress components are zero, can be obtained by making the previous equation for the shear stress \tau_\mathrm\,\! equal to zero. Thus we have: :\tau_\mathrm = -\frac(\sigma_x - \sigma_y )\sin 2\theta + \tau_\cos 2\theta=0\,\! and we obtain :\tan 2 \theta_\mathrm = \frac\,\! This equation defines two values \theta_\mathrm\,\! which are 90^\circ\,\! apart (Figure 8.3). The same result can be obtained by finding the angle \theta\,\! which makes the normal stress \sigma_\mathrm\,\! a maximum, i.e. \frac=0\,\! The principal stresses \sigma_1\,\! and \sigma_2\,\!, or minimum and maximum normal stresses \sigma_\mathrm\,\! and \sigma_\mathrm\,\!, respectively, can then be obtained by replacing both values of \theta_\mathrm\,\! into the previous equation for \sigma_\mathrm\,\!. This can be achieved by rearranging the equations for \sigma_\mathrm\,\! and \tau_\mathrm\,\!, first transposing the first term in the first equation and squaring both sides of each of the equations then adding them. Thus we have : \left \sigma_\mathrm - \tfrac ( \sigma_x + \sigma_y )\right2 + \tau_\mathrm^2 = \left tfrac(\sigma_x - \sigma_y)\right2 + \tau_^2 \,\! : (\sigma_\mathrm - \sigma_\mathrm)^2 + \tau_\mathrm^2 = R^2 \,\! where :R = \sqrt \quad \text \quad \sigma_\mathrm = \tfrac ( \sigma_x + \sigma_y )\,\! which is the equation of a circle of radius R\,\! centered at a point with coordinates sigma_\mathrm, 0,\!, called Mohr's circle. But knowing that for the principal stresses the shear stress \tau_\mathrm = 0\,\!, then we obtain from this equation: :\sigma_1 =\sigma_\mathrm = \tfrac(\sigma_x + \sigma_y) + \sqrt\,\! :\sigma_2 =\sigma_\mathrm = \tfrac(\sigma_x + \sigma_y) - \sqrt\,\! When \tau_=0\,\! the infinitesimal element is oriented in the direction of the principal planes, thus the stresses acting on the rectangular element are principal stresses: \sigma_x = \sigma_1\,\! and \sigma_y = \sigma_2\,\!. Then the normal stress \sigma_\mathrm\,\! and shear stress \tau_\mathrm\,\! as a function of the principal stresses can be determined by making \tau_=0\,\!. Thus we have :\sigma_\mathrm = \frac ( \sigma_1 + \sigma_2 ) + \frac ( \sigma_1 - \sigma_2 )\cos 2\theta\,\! :\tau_\mathrm = -\frac(\sigma_1 - \sigma_2 )\sin 2\theta\,\! Then the maximum shear stress \tau_\mathrm\,\! occurs when \sin 2\theta = 1\,\!, i.e. \theta = 45^\circ\,\! (Figure 8.3): :\tau_\mathrm = \frac(\sigma_1 - \sigma_2 )\,\! Then the minimum shear stress \tau_\mathrm\,\! occurs when \sin 2\theta = -1\,\!, i.e. \theta = 135^\circ\,\! (Figure 8.3): :\tau_\mathrm = -\frac{2}(\sigma_1 - \sigma_2 )\,\!


See also

* Plane strain


References

Meyers and Chawla (1999): "Mechanical Behavior of Materials," 66-75. Metallurgy Mechanical engineering