dirnad
Mechanical
- Jul 20, 2014
- 7
Most descriptions tell us that a tensile stress in one direction stiffens a structure against deflection in other directions.
But does it also stiffen against further deformation in the same direction?
Some testing with FEA software says yes - vibration modes in the direction of the stress have a higher frequency than without stress. But it leads to a strange situation. If you put a bar in compression it softens axially. Enough compression and it becomes unstable, indicating buckling (?) in the axial direction, which seems somewhat unphysical. Although this happens with an axial engineering strain of -1 which itself is unphysical.
Can anyone provide some explanation of how this phenomenon works and if some of it is just an artifact of the software?
But does it also stiffen against further deformation in the same direction?
Some testing with FEA software says yes - vibration modes in the direction of the stress have a higher frequency than without stress. But it leads to a strange situation. If you put a bar in compression it softens axially. Enough compression and it becomes unstable, indicating buckling (?) in the axial direction, which seems somewhat unphysical. Although this happens with an axial engineering strain of -1 which itself is unphysical.
Can anyone provide some explanation of how this phenomenon works and if some of it is just an artifact of the software?