AeroStructAnalyst
Aerospace
- Aug 4, 2012
- 21
thread727-253537
thread727-253537
I know in this forum the issue of Von Mises stress has been discussed time and time again,(e.g however having gone through most of the threads, I am still left wondering about the validity of Von Mises stress beyond yield for the following reasons;
1. The derivation of Von Mises stress has its origin from Distortion energy which is Total strain (Ut) - Hydrostatic strain (Uh), therefore,
Ud_3D = 1+v/3E[(s1-s2)^2+(s2-s3)^2+(s3-s1)^2/2] where s1, s2, s3 are principal stresses.
The above equation holds true for a 3D stress state, and can be shown that for a 1D case, as in the case of uni-axial tensile testing,
Ud_1D = 1+v/3E*Sy, (where Sy = yield stress). This was first postulated by Maxwell years ago, verified by Hencky and subsequently dozens of testing has demonstrated this to be some what true with a limited scatter.
Hence by distortion energy per unit volume equivalence, Von Mises postulated that Yielding will occur when [(s1-s2)^2+(s2-s3)^2+(s3-s1)^2/2] is equal to or greater than the material Yield stress, Sy. Hence generally, failure of a material is assumed when the Yield strength is exceed.
However, beyond Yielding, does Von Mises stress actually tell you anything about Rupture of the material which is what those of us that do assess structures against ultimate strength really do worry about. As far as the postulate of Huber, Hencky and Von Mises are concerned, I struggle to understand the validity of using Von Mises beyond Yielding.
I would appreciate if someone can provide a valid explanation of why Von Mises is valid in predicting Rupture of material as is the case with Ultimate strength - Also, I know Von Mises is a computed number, which is suppose to be compared against material Yield strength to failure, and not rupture.
thread727-253537
I know in this forum the issue of Von Mises stress has been discussed time and time again,(e.g however having gone through most of the threads, I am still left wondering about the validity of Von Mises stress beyond yield for the following reasons;
1. The derivation of Von Mises stress has its origin from Distortion energy which is Total strain (Ut) - Hydrostatic strain (Uh), therefore,
Ud_3D = 1+v/3E[(s1-s2)^2+(s2-s3)^2+(s3-s1)^2/2] where s1, s2, s3 are principal stresses.
The above equation holds true for a 3D stress state, and can be shown that for a 1D case, as in the case of uni-axial tensile testing,
Ud_1D = 1+v/3E*Sy, (where Sy = yield stress). This was first postulated by Maxwell years ago, verified by Hencky and subsequently dozens of testing has demonstrated this to be some what true with a limited scatter.
Hence by distortion energy per unit volume equivalence, Von Mises postulated that Yielding will occur when [(s1-s2)^2+(s2-s3)^2+(s3-s1)^2/2] is equal to or greater than the material Yield stress, Sy. Hence generally, failure of a material is assumed when the Yield strength is exceed.
However, beyond Yielding, does Von Mises stress actually tell you anything about Rupture of the material which is what those of us that do assess structures against ultimate strength really do worry about. As far as the postulate of Huber, Hencky and Von Mises are concerned, I struggle to understand the validity of using Von Mises beyond Yielding.
I would appreciate if someone can provide a valid explanation of why Von Mises is valid in predicting Rupture of material as is the case with Ultimate strength - Also, I know Von Mises is a computed number, which is suppose to be compared against material Yield strength to failure, and not rupture.