DanteBlake
Mechanical
- May 1, 2012
- 7
You have a plastic bar. It has a constant coefficient of linear thermal expansion. The stress-strain curve is non-linear. Now imagine both of these scenarios:
Scenario 1: You heat the plastic bar to 100C. You then fix it at both ends and let it cool to 23C. Let's assume that thermal expansion caused a 1% decrease in length. However, since it was fixed at both ends at 100C, that translates into a 1% strain.
Scenario 2: At 23C, you fix both ends of a plastic bar. You then stretch it to a 1% strain.
Will both scenarios result in the same stress. Or will scenario 1 have a smaller stress due the higher temperatures having a lower modulus. We only care about the end stress at 23C.
Scenario 1: You heat the plastic bar to 100C. You then fix it at both ends and let it cool to 23C. Let's assume that thermal expansion caused a 1% decrease in length. However, since it was fixed at both ends at 100C, that translates into a 1% strain.
Scenario 2: At 23C, you fix both ends of a plastic bar. You then stretch it to a 1% strain.
Will both scenarios result in the same stress. Or will scenario 1 have a smaller stress due the higher temperatures having a lower modulus. We only care about the end stress at 23C.